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LIFE AND WRITINGS OF SWEDENBORd.
Vol. I.
EMANUEL SWEDENBORG:
HIS LIFE AND WBITINGS.
BY
WILLIAM WHITE.
' God of old hath for his people wrought
* Thuigfl M incredible : What hinders now ?'
Samton Agonistei.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
LONDON:
SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, & CO.,
STATIONERS* HALL COURT.
1867.
f\
JL /0\ ^ /^- C
ILLUSTRATIONS.
Jesper Svedbero, Bishop of Srara. — (FrorUupiece,)
Copied from a rare engraving in the possetfion of Dr. Oarth Wilkinson. The translation
of the stania in Swedish runs thus litcrallj— *JSr«re 9tmnd» Herr Svedherp*9 imafft fn
' eofpefplate^ whoM Uaminpt and wi»dom and zml Jbr ChrisVt Jloek, are wideiy and
' mo§t fanmrahly Jbiotm in the kingdom of Swedent and will he in eedar-wood %pith
* 0iemal tnomory praieed* — and that in German thus— *ir^rf etands the image (no metal
* can shew the reality) of him who eontaina nothing hut the fear of Ood amd wiedom,
* gkamld mang walk in hitfooUUpe, 0 how will then throtigh thee thg Zion Bwedon ri$e /*
Ehantjel Swedemboro PoffeSS,
Copied firom the lirontisplece of the * Opera Philoeophiea et Jftneraiia.* He waa then
tn his 46th year : in hia 80th» Cono professed to discern a perfisct likeness in this engrsTing :
Vol. II. p. 483.
EBBATA.
For MCflM read tovmmi, page 68, Un« 10 from bottom.
Insert not after had, „ 80 „ 14 „
For ma read do, „ 398 ,• • •,
Initrt not afttr who, „ 406 9 ,.
PBEFACE.
SwEDENBOBa's name lias grown familiar in English
literature, but with few definite ideas attached to
it. The causes are not far to seek. Swedenborg's
works are so voluminous as to daunt many readers,
nor are there any one or two of his volumes calcu-
lated to afford a complete view of his philosophy
and theology. The little sect moreover, which as-
sumes his authority to be divine, has never com-
manded the public ear, nor has any of its members
written books which have travelled far beyond the
sectarian borders.
To the majority, Swedenborg is no more than
an eminent Ghost Seer. Professor Masson, in a
recent popular work, states this broadly, saying,
* From the most moderate Animal Magnetism to
* the most involved dreams of the Swedenborgians
* and Spirit Eappers, is simply the idea, that our
* familiar world or cosmos, may not be the total
* sphere of the phenomenal'*^ — that is to say, the
* * Becent British Philosophy {Lectures delivered at tJie Hoyal Listitution,
18^},' p. 285.
IV PREFACE.
drift of Swedenborg's teaching is to prove the
existence of a Spiritual World — a phenomenal
world beyond that which now affects our senses,
Mr. Masson means well, but he completely misap-
prehends Swedenborg's real business.
As a Ghost Seer, Swedenborg is not without
interest, but it is an interest which is quickly
exhausted : to regard him simply as a Ghost Seer
is to make a prodigious mistake. The mere wonder
monger soon becomes a bore ; and as he prolongs
his entertainment we have to cry as Hotspur did
under the infliction of Glendower—
' He angers me,
* With telling me of the moldwarp and the ant,
< Of the dreamer Merlm, and his prophecies ; ^
* And of a dragon and a finless fish,
< A clip-winged griffin, and a moulten raven,
' A couching lion, and a ramping cat,
* And such a deal of skimble-skamble stuff
* As puts me from my faith. I tell you what —
* He held me, last night, at least nine hours,
^ In reckoning up the several devils* names
* Tliat were his lackeys : I cried hum — and well — ^go to —
' But mark'd him not a word. O, he*s as tedious
* As is a tired horse, a railing wife ;
* Worse than a smokv house : — I had rather live
^ With cheese and garlic in a windmill, far,
* Than feed on cates, and have him talk to me,
* In anv summer-house in Cliristendom.'*
Elsewhere I have shewn liow Swedenborg's true
* King Henry IV., Pai*t I., Act iii., fcScunc 1
PREFACE. y
glory consists in a new definition of tlie relations
between the Creator and tlie Creature, and that his
other-world experiences are altogether subsidiary
to the illustration of these relations. He demon-
strates the absolute inutility (for philosophic pur-
poses) of the mere knowledge of an objective
Spiritual World. Its phenomena teach just as
much and just as little as the phenomena of the
Natural World ; for there roam Atheists who prove
there is no God, and Sadducees who argue they have
never died* All this however has been obscured by
his vulgar reputation as Ghost Seer, and his merit
as the author of a profound and original philosophy
is ahnost unknown.
To try and remove somewhat of this inveterate
ignorance concerning Swedenborg seemed not an
unworthy task ; and a biography in connection with
a review of each of his books appeared to be a good
way of effecting my purpose. In short, I resolved
to compile a Swedenborg Cyclopaedia in which no
anecdote, nor any important principle should be
omitted. Thus all other ends have been surrendered
to the production of complete information.
Swedenborg has as far as possible been left to
tell his own story, and to reveal the heart of his
own books. The selection of proper material from
ri PREFACE.
a temtorj so extensive has cost far more pains
than tlie same amount of original composition. In
many cases the selected passages have suffered
severe abridgement. Swedenborg's thoughts are
constantly delivered in bulky solution, and if in
getting rid of the superfluous water I have ever
strained away some of the essential substance, I
have in all cases supplied the reference for my
extract whereby a suspicious reader may test my
accuracy. The complaint however which I really
dread is, that whilst I was straining I did not strain
harder.
As a critic of Swedenborg my difficulties have
not been slight. With a few exceptions, he has
undergone no criticism. He has been cursed with-
out reserve, and he has been blessed without reserve,
but he has been rarely appreciated. I have there-
fore had to form many judgements, which I feel
sure would be modified had I enjoyed the discussion
of Uberal and enlightened minds.
Much new matter relating to Swedenborg will
be found in these volumes, but I need only specially
refer to the important discovery of his Book of
Dreams written in 1744, and printed by Mr. G. E.
Klemming of Stockholm in 1859. The Book of
Dreams sheds a flood of light on an obscure and
PREFACE. vii
pivotal point in his biography. It will be observed,
that it has enabled me to vindicate the memory of
the Rev. A. Mathesius, who for many years has been
hooted through Swedenborgian literature as a slan-
derer, and subsequently a madman.
There are no doubt many facts yet to be brought
to light relative to Swedenborg's personal Ufe in
Sweden and England ; and if any one in the course
of his reading encounters aught unrecorded in the
following pages, I should gladly and gratefully
hear from him.
Lastly, I owe thanks for assistance to many
friends : one has to write a book to learn how
courteous the world can be : let me name specially,
Dr. Kahl, Dean of Lund; Baron C. Dirckinck
Holmfeld, of Copenhagen; the late Dr. Tafel, of
Tubingen ; and Dr. Gktrth Wilkinson and William
Fryer, Esq., of London.
Thcrlow Road, Haufstead,
Iheember, 1866.
CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
PART I.
Education, Business, and Philosophy.
CHAPTER L
Jesper Syedbebg.
Page.
Soul from Father, Body from Mother — ^Isaksson, father of Svedberg
— Name changed to Svedberg — ^Isaksson kept by his Family —
Svedberg in a Mill-dam — Ill-Peter's School — To Upsala and then
to Lund — A Dandy at Lund — ^Intercourse with Spirits — Studies
directed by an Angel — ^Tutor to Brunner — Publishes a Sermon —
Chaplain to Life Guards — Marries at Thirty — Visits England,
France, and Germany — ^Angelic Language — Returns to Stockholm
and finds a Son — Catechises his Regiment — Assists the Court
Chaplain and pleases the King ... .. ... 1
CHAPTER IL
Jesper Svedberq at Home and in the World.
Birth of his son Emanuel — ^Translated to Vingaker — Queer People
there — Appointed Professor of Theology at Upsala — Then
Rector of Upsala — Presented to the living of Dannmark — Made
Dean of Upsala — ^Revision of the Swedish Bible — ^Prepares a
new Psalter, which causes great uproar, and is suppressed —
Home and Habits at Upsala — ^Names of his Children — Emanuers
Thoughts in Childhood — His Religious Precocity — His Peculiar
Respiration — Death of Svedberg's Wife and Eldest Son — Death
of Charles XI. — His Melancholy Experience of Mankind
CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
CHAPTER III.
Svedoebg's Second Marriage; Labt Datb at Upsala;
AND Bishopric.
Page.
An Odd Courtship — ^A House- Warming — ^Young Charles XH.
conspired against, vows that the whistle of bnllets shall be his
music — Svedberg preaches before him — Persuades Charles not to
double the Clerical Income-Tax — Svcdberg^s House and Upsala
Cathedral burnt down — His Outcry — Created Bishop of Skara —
Visits his Diocese, sets up a Printing-Press, sends Missionaries
to the American Indians — Remonstrates with the King on his
Exactions — Casts out Devils from a Maid-Servant — ^Brings a
Female Convict to Repentance — Miraculously cures his Servant
— ^His strict Economy of Time — Conscientious Patronage — How
he got a Living for his Son-in-law — Exacts no Tithes — His
Reforming Temper — Concern for Purity of Swedish Language —
Publishes a Granmiar and Dictionary — ^Improves and Opens
E/CnOOlS ... ... ... ... ••• .•• A*/
CHAPTER IV.
Emanuel Abroad and tiib Bishop at Home.
Emanuel educated at Upsala — His Latin Dissertation — Gk>cs
. abroad — Violates the English Quarantine — Spends a year in
London and Oxford — Wliat was passing in London — Visits
Flamsteed — Sails for Holland — Lives a year in Paris — Then to
Griefsvalde — Bishop Svedberg's Troubles — Skara Burnt —
Brunsbo burnt with all his chattels and papers — His letter to
Princess Ulrika Eleonora — Appeals to Charles XII. for help —
His Palace rebuilt — ^The Devil burnt Brunsbo — Asks Charles XII.
to give Emanuel employment— Asks again — Emanuel^s account
of himself, his inventions and writings — Prints a book at Griefs-
valde — Charles XH. defeated and in exile — Suddenly appears at
Stralsund — Emanuel hastens home — His father again writes to
the King on his behalf — And yet again — Publishes a volume of
Iiatin verse at Skara — A Specimen — His scientific and com-
mercial schemes — Stralsund captured and Cliarles XIL escapes
to Sweden ... ... ... ... ... ... 30
CONTENTS OF THE FIBST VOLUME. xi
CHAPTER V.
■
Charles XII. and Swedenborg.
Page.
Emanuel st&rts and stops ^ DcBdaltia Hyperhoreus^ — Bishop Svedberg
again advances the necessities of his family to the King —
Charles XII. gives Emanuel the post of Assessor in the College
of Mines, and becomes intimate with him — Account of their
Discussions — Emanuel assists Polhem in engineering — Charles
advises Polhem to give his daughter in marriage to Emanuel —
Polhem willing, but his daughter unwilling — Match broken off —
Bishop Svedberg and his son Emanuel join in a Copper-mine —
Bishop Svedberg and Charles XII. together — Amusing discus-
sions— Charles lays siege to Frederickshall and has Emanuel to
help him — Hardships of the siege — Charles killed ... ... 47
CHAPTER VI.
Business and Speculations of Swedenborg.
The Svedberg Family ennobled and the name changed to Sweden-
borg— The Bishop favours despotism — Is attacked, and his
defence — His roughness with royalty — Visited by the King and
Queen — Death of Bishop Svedberg^s 2nd Wife — Takes a 3rd —
Swedenborg's scientific pamphlets — Speculations about the Sun —
Discontent with himself and his prospects — Goes for 15 months
on a continental tour — Geological studies — Issues a bundle of
scientific pamphlets at Amsterdam-— Theory of Chemistry— Iron
and Fire — Longitude discovered by Lunar Observations — New
Rules for maintaining Heat in Rooms — Miscellaneous Scientific
Observations — Dedication to Duke of Brunswick — Careless
Printers — Returns to Sweden ... ... ... ... 58
CHAPTER VIL
Twelve Years of Business and Silence— 1722-34.
Pamphlet on Swedish Currency — Swedenborg at once Speculative
and Practical — Received full Pay as Assessor in 1722 — Offered
and declined the Professorship of Mathematics at Upsala, 1724 —
XU CONTEXTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
Page.
Fatality of MathcmaticianB to abide in Theory — PietistH active
in Sweden — Bishop Svedberg gently disposed to them — Charged
in Diet with comph'city in their Doings — Goes to a Meeting of
Pietii4tH and reports to the Diet — Demurs to their Contempt for
Unconverted Priests — lias had no commerce with Pietists, but a
very great deal with Impietists — Diet extinguis*hes Pietism —
Kotum from Sea of Jespor Swcdenborg— His Father's anxiety
about him — His 2nd Wife^s will favours Emanuel, yet Jesper
will luive 6,000 dalers — Bishop thanks God that Jesper is not
nmrried, and hopes he will get a good Wife and something with
her — Jesper marries in 1728, and propagates the Swedenborg
family — Emanuel urged to enter into Matrimony — Keeps a
Mistress — Elected a Member of the Stockholm Academy of
Sciences, 1729 — Bishop Svedberg's Palace again destroyed by
fire, 1730 — His vigorous Health begins to decline ... ... 70
CHAPTER VIII.
Travelling and Printing in Germant.
Swcdenborg sets out for Leipsic, 1733 — Visits Berlin, with which
ho is charmed — Sees the Tall Soldiers— Attends Catholic Service
at Dresden — Meets with Wolf's * Cosmologff — ^Wolf's place in
PliiloKophy — Visits Prague — Tour among the Mines of Bohemia
— Prints * Ojpera Philosophica et Mineralia' at Leipsic, and pub-
lishes there, 1734 — Writes and prints a treatise on the Infinite
at same time— Homewards through Hesse-Cassel where he meets
Wolf— Prince Frederick's (afterwards the Great) opinion of
Wolf— Voltaire on Wolf^Swedenborg finds himself in full
accord with Wolf — Visits Duke Rudolph of Brunswick, who
bears tlic entire cost of the publication of his works — Returns
to Stockholm, July, 1734 ... ... ... ... 76
CHAPTER IX.
Philosophical and Mineralogic.\l Works.
Three Folios — Two occupied with Iron and Copper Manufacture —
Publication of Trade Secrets disapproved— His Justification —
First Folio entitled *Pni«c»/wa,' an Explanation of the Elementary
• ••
CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME. XlU
World — How Atoms and Earths were created — Experience,
Reason and Geometry the means to Philosophy — Experience the
way to Wisdom — But Experience without Reason powerless —
Reason builds with the Knowledges supplied by Experience —
Reason the mark of the Philosopher — Reason invokes all the
Sciences, but chiefly Geometry — Mineral, Vegetable, Animal,
and Elemental Kingdoms all subject to Geometry — Elemental
Kingdom composed of fluid substances, as Air and Ether — All
things in these Kingdoms are Mechanical— The World a System
of Mechanism — Hence by Geometry the whole World may be
explained— Nature^s Method everywhere the same — Size makes
no Diflerence — The Infinite not subject to Geometry, nor pro-
bably the Soul, nor probably an infinity of Things with which we
are unacquainted — ^The Philosopher seeks the Causes of Things,
and when he has found the Central Law of Nature he will be as
a Spider in her Web, aware of all which passes in the Cir-
cumferences— Reverence to God a mark of the true Philosopher
— Nature only a word for the complex of Forces from the
Infinite — Swedenborg assumes that the External World com-
menced in a Point produced immediately from the Infinito— The
Point mediates between the Infinite and the Finite — It is pure
and total Motion — It is Nothing geometrically considered —
Motion, as derived from the Point, ever flows from a Centre to a
Circumference, and around the Circumference back to the Centre,
and is thus an Everlasting Spiral — The First Finite originates
from a Congress of such Points, which Finite is the most perfect
of Figures, the first limitation of Substance, and the first
occupant of Space — Second Finites produced from the coacer-
vation of First Finites — Second Pinites form the Solar Vortex
and the First Element — Second Finites condense into Third
Finites, forming Magnetism or the Second Element — Fourth
Finites formed in like manner from Third Finites — The Third
Element or Ether consists of Fourth Finites — By condensation
and coacervation Fourth Finites become Fifth Finites, which
constitute Air or the Fourth Element, and by still greater
pressure Water — A Globule of Water contains all the Elements
from the Point downwards— Prior and Posterior Finites stand to
each other as Active and Passive— Swedenborg confirms his
Theory by Musschenbroek^s Researches in Magnetism — He finds
Law where Musschenbrock sees none — Applies his Theory to
Sun and Planets, for what is tnie of a single Particle is true of
XIV OOMTENTS OF THE FIB8T VOLUME.
Page
any congeries of Particles — ^The San oonsists of Points secreting
Elements which condense into Earths — Mineral Kingdom con-
densed from Water — Crusts formed round Globules of Water, and
set in their interstices^ which Crust was Salt, and by various
processes assumed many Mineral Forms — A Ground thus laid
for Vegetables, then for Animals, and lastly for Man — Tis a
Mathematician's Dream — ^Assumes his Point and draws whatever
he requires out of it — Swedenborg lived to disown his Theory —
Some instances of self-criticism — Seems to have suggested the
Nebular Hypothesis to Buffon — Something to be said for the
Point of Force — Faraday's opinion — Similarity throughout
Nature a fruitful Doctrine — Swcdenborg's Vortices not the
Vortices exploded by Newton — By a Magnet Swedenborg would
explain the Universe ... ... ... ... ... 83
CHAPTER X.
The Infinite and tiie Final Cause of Creation, and
TUB MeCUANISM of TUE INTEUC0UB8E BETWEEN TIIE
Soul and the Body.
Dedication of treatise to Bishop Benzelius — The Infinite the
difficulty of Philosophy — Man being Finite cannot know the
Infinite — The Infinite impossible in Nature, for Nature consists
of Finites— Finites without Boundaries are not Infinite— By
whom was the Universe created and finited ? By God ; but if
God be Finite, By whom was He finited? We are compelled
to confess at last a First Cause, un-caused and un-fiuited, thus
Infinite — We can say the Infinite w; we can never know whai
the Infinite is — The character of the Creator inferred from His
Creation — Nexus between the Infinite and the Finite— Without
some communication with the Infinite, the Finite could not
exist — Reason affirms such a Nexus, but knows nothing of its
character — Applies to Revelation and learns that Jesus Christ
is the Nexus — The Soul is not Infinite because created — It must
therefore be sought iu Creation somewhere between Points and
Earths —Being Finite it must be extended — It is a part of the
Body, but dwells iu no particular gland, nor is diffused throughout
the system — Its seat is in the Brain where it is ubiquitous — Man
comprisch all Elements, therefore Ity h\& Soul he is kin to the
CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME. XY
Page.
Son and by the grosser parts of his body to the Earths —
Swedenborg determines to search for the Soul,- and devotes
himself to the study of Anatomy and Physiology — ^Doubts the
soundness of his Materialism — Probably writes *IM CuUu H
' ^Imors Z>0i* about this time (1734) ... ... ... 98
CHAPTER XI.
The Death of Bishop Svedbero.
The Bishop's joy in his Son — Svedberg's Autobiography — Dies
1705 aged 82 — His Directions for his Funeral — His Character,
worldly and spiritual, restless and aggressive — Love of Music —
God always on his side, and the Devil on his adversary's — Much
of his Frankness insensibility — Left a considerable Fortune —
Swedenborg's Income (about which, see Note in Appendix) ... 110
CHAPTER XIL
SEvm Teabs of Travel akd of Physiological Studies.
Swedenborg leaves Stockholm, 10th July, 1736 — Amsterdam —
Reflections on the causes of Dutch prosperity — Advantages of a
Republic — Franciscan Friars — Fat Monks in Picardy — Arrives
in Paris, where he remains a year and a half — Sight-Seemg —
Starts for Italy — Lyons — Turin — Milan — Four months in Venice
— Four months in Rome — * Opera PhUoaophica et MineraUd*
inscribed in ^ Index ExpurgcUoriua^ — Pope Clement XII. —
Florence — Genoa — Doge and Nobles like Apes — Conjectural
Biography — Possibly attended Anatomical Schools — Told Tuxen
he had a Mistress in Italy — Robsahm's statement ... '... 114
CHAPTER XIIL
The Egonomt of the Animal Kingdom.
Search for the Soul — Man the Epitome of Nature— Contents of
^Eeonomjf of Animal Kingdom^^Ex^erienco in the Dissccting-
Koom— Summaries of the Anatomists— «Dangcrb of a Discoverer
xn CONTENTS OF THE FIBST VOLUME.
Page.
— Experience the only safe Guide — Swedenborg^s Constractiye
Spirit — Introduction to Rational Psychology — Degrees of Order
— We must ascend from Low to High— Six Grand Series^ three
superior and • throe inferior, divide Creation — ^These Series
divisible into Scries and Series of Series with the exception of
the First Substance — The Soul to be approached by the re-
moval of her Coverings — Symbols required for Inward Essences
— Locke quoted — Murals might be reduced to Rule like Mathe-
matics— Science of the Soul based in Physics — The Soul
demanded from Anatomy, whicli answers inquire of Animal
Spirits — llaller on the Nerve Spirit — Animal Spirits give Sweden-
borg whut he requires— Uo concentrates his attention on the
lilood — All in the Body pre-exists in the Blood, therefore to
understand the DK)od is to understand the Body — A Red-Blood
Globule is the first Outcome of the inner Force of Nature, and
its most perfect and simple Entity — Its Composition — Serum its
Atmosphere— Swedenborg's Doctrine of Salt — Red Blood is bred
in the Stomach, and is worn as a vesture by the White Blood
which is derived from Ether sucked out of Air in the Lungs —
White Blood the vesture of the Animal Spirits which originate
in the Brain and are diffused by the Ner>'es — Animal Spirits
identified with the Soul, aflenvards defined as the SouPs Vesture
— Conjectures and Conclusions about the Soul — Difficulty of
grasping the Soul — Dawn of Spiritual Ideas — The Spiritual
Body — No Resurrection of the Flesh — The Soul will be its own
Judge— Earth the Seminary of Heaven — God the only Life —
Suns of Nature and Heaven — Mau^s Soul from his Father and
Body from his Mother — Courage exemplified in Charles XII. ... 123
CHAPTER XIV.
The Animal Kingdom.
Swedenborg confesses too much haste in approaching the Soul —
Resolves on a more deliberate Quest— Prognunnie of Operations
— He works for Unbelievers — Induction and Deduction the two
Paths to the Soul— Deduction renounced— Induction chosen —
He will ascend from Experience to Principles —Deduction, whilst
pretendmg to much, has nothing underived from Experience —
A tine piece of Self-ciiticism— Having ascended from Experience
OOMTEirrB OP THE FIBST VOLUME. XVll
Psge.
to Doctrine he will then as from a Mountain contemplate his
Achievements — Contents and Method of the ^Animal Kingdom^
— Only three Parts published — A mass of work left in manuscript 149
CHAPTER XV.
The Worship akd Love of God.
Date of the Work — Its Title — Its Origin in an Autumnal
Meditation — I^ife runs from Birth to Death throughout Creation
— The Sun and his Seven Children— Manner of their Birth and
settlement in their Orbits— The Earth a boiling mass and
perfect sphere — Its gradual retreat from the Sun — Origin of
Plants and completion of the Vegetable Kingdom by the Sun —
The Spiritual Sun begins to operate and creates from Plants as
many kinds of Animals as there are Plants — ^The Earth ready
for its King — Adam's birth, nurture, and education — Eve's birth
and introduction to Adam — Was Swedenborg in earnest ? — Note
from ^Anti-Jacobin^ ... ... ... ... ... 157
CHAPTER XVL
A Retrospective Revikw.
Swedenborg thus far had acquired little Reputation — His practical
Merits — Dr. Percy quoted — Misfortune of writing in Latin —
Lack of special or peculiar Doctrine — Loose Style and Lumber-
ing Eloquence — Resurrection and second Death of his Works —
Emerson's Eulogium cited — Discoveries ascribed to Swedenborg
— Kingsley quoted — Swedenborg a Theorist, not an Experimen-
talist— His Reticence — Business Habits and Prudence — Absence
of Humour and other Characteristics — Our Regard for him
wholly intellectual — His Spiritual Childhood and Scientific
Manhood —Search for the Soul — His Largeness, Roughness and
Incompleteness — ^His leisurely Enterprise — Passion and Sacrifices
for Truth— His Neglect of his own Works— Temper of his
Manhood— Ignorance of Theology — Never read Jacob Behmen —
Relation of Faith and Good Works discussed— Hints of things
to come — Let us pass the Screen between the Outer and
Inner Worlds ... ... ... .. ... ••• 174
XYIU GOSTESTB W THK FIKT TOLUIfS.
PABT n.
SpikitsSeeing and Theology.
CHAPTER I.
Tub Daws or a Nsir Lm.
Hw<MliMiUi>rg*H K^Hplmtion as a Cbdld — Curioas Experiences in
MmihoiHl -DUcov^rv of » Diarv kept bv IiLm in 1745-44 —
lAmstfiA StocWhobu tor Holland — Beginning of Visions — A
MnohiiiOi (iarUvu, and Vermin — Kev» ami Beetles — Before
ICAfetor Lor\r«» Supper-- l>e«»oUtion and Extasy — The Lord
HppoHm to him -Sv'Vs^ Bishop Sv^berg — Goes down Stairs all
NtK^tt 'l'^^> i}ri^at^<^ of Sinners — Riches and Melancholy — ^A
lloukni^UvrV Shv»p — Silence about Visions — Kissed by a Black
l>4>tf A Ni^ht of lUiss— Abstraction in the Streets — Sense oi
|)uwur(hliit>Mi Oomltats with Double Thoughts — ^Voice from his
Fulhur NViiimni tvmpt him— Horrible Dreams — Faith in God*s
U\(\ Uo«iil\i\4 t\» \h} IKkI** whoUv — Vaniiv of Riches — ^Afflicted
with Uog* 4iul Kvtl Thoughts — Strange Dreams — Not to pollute
)iiut60ll' wiih ThooU>gY- His Brother Eliezer — Leaves Holland
fur KiigUud -Mvi^terious Entries — Adventures in London —
liittiiiM) luwaixt Joy — Goes to Moravian Chapel — Lodges with
ItiookiiiDr \\\ l*Vtter l^aue— Account of Swedenborg*s Doings
|iiilil|BhiHl by John >V^ley in *ArmMm Ma^oMim* — Plainly a
liuu Hhiiy Attoiupt of Himhnarsh to discredit it — MatheMus
i'liitllritunt by i)koly — Wcslov invents a second Story — ^Disin-
MDiiiiiiUM UHt^ of \VoiiIi>y*s fiction by tho Swedenborgians — Their
HUiiiltirs of MathostluH— 'IVo Jews steal Swedenborg's watch-
Diary roiiumwl — Fits of Shuddering —Amorous DesiBes —
Hy mill ilio DrtmiUH— Auothor Vision of Christ— Diary ends —
Moriivliiii (Miurch In tVttvr l.<ano— RobsahmV Account of Sweden-
InirK'n tii'nt VUloii llt)y(^r*s Account of the same — Passage from
HwinldiilMirK** Diary— >Vhm ho nmdV — What if he was?— London
'II 17 Ai 1& |A'n\r>t L«Mulnn tor Stuckhohu in sununcr of 1745 ... 1D5
CONTENTS OP THE FIRST VOLUME. xix
CHAPTER 11.
Called to a Nxw Work.
Page.
Resumes bis Assessorship— Learns Hebrew — ^Adversaria on Old
Testament — Resigns Office in 1747, and receives a Pension equal
to his Salary — Letter to Hartley — Statements concerning his
Spiritual Privileges — Contempt with which these will be re-
ceived— Carlyle quoted — Swedenborg must be sharply tried, but
How ? — Conditions of his acquaintance with Heaven and Hell —
Wliat can and cannot be seen — Finer Substances of Nature the
ground of the Spiritual World — Correspondence of the Outer
and Inner Worlds — The Spiritual Sun— Appearances of Space —
How Angels travel — Mind governs appearances in the Spiritual
World— The Light of Heaven — Man belongs to both Worlds —
How he may behold the Inner World — Swedenborg's case— His
peculiar Respiration — Dr. Johnson on Apparitions — Sweden-
borg's noble opportunities — Appearances of those given to
abstract thought in the Spiritual World — Opening of the Inner
Sight illustrated in the instance of Elisha^s young man — Sweden-
borg's Divine Call not peculiar, but a very common profession —
Catechism and Herbert quoted — St. John on the Divine Pre-
sence— How Swedenborg's authority is to be vindicated — ^Truth
its own Witness — Who alone can receive Truth — ^Angels only
believe what they see to be true — Why Men are careless about
Truth — Any Authority in Swedenborg disowned — ^Absurdity of
a general Providence — God's Government special and universal
— Imputation of our Infirmities to God — God's work per-
petual— He alone lives and is ever and everywhere the same —
He is to each one of us as near as to Swedenborg — ^How Sweden-
borg saw the Lord — How He is seen by the Angels — How He
was seen by the Men of the Bible — How He speaks with and
may be seen by every Man — How He fills Men — ^In what sense
the Lord made His second Advent in Swedenborg — Dr. Channing
on the Lord's appearances ... ... ... ... 249
CHAPTER III.
The Spiritual Diary.
Settlement of Swedenborg's Mind — His Temptations — Sails for
London, 1747 — Christ iau VL and the Bishop — Commences a
XX CONTENTS OP THE FIRST VOLUME.
Spiritnal Diary — ^Its Character — Spirits torment him — Punish-
ment of a Witch — ^Worldly Cares close Heaven — Misers and Mice
— Book Worms — ^Beggars after Death — Directed by an Angel —
Conspiracy to suffocate Swedenborg — He is tempted to steal —
How Spirits might possess Men — ^l^unishment of Lazy Women —
Worthless Metaphysics — Conyersation with deceased Acquaint-
ance— Spirits can change Flavours — White Vestments — 111-Gotten
soon lost — ^Punishment of ^Tiirling — Piety blended with Hatred
— Rank vanishes with Death — Spirits claim Swedenborg's work
— Lying Spirits — Hebrew Scholars — Martyrs — Spirits settle in
Places and Dress — Boys Fighting — Swedenborg's Happmess —
Prayers — Spirits plot to have Swedenborg run over in London
streets — Sirens seek to possess him — He is possessed by Spirits —
The Reward of Love — Advised to suppress his Discoveries —
Bishop Svedberg's emplojTnent — Origin of Dreams — Evil punishes
and Goodness rewards itself— Origin of Good and Evil —Hypo-
crites— ^The Lord's Providence — Sara Hesselia prompts Sweden-
boi;g to kill himself ... ... ... ... ... 288
CHAPTER IV.
The Pubucation of the Arcana Ccblestia.
Eight Quartos published in London between 1749 and 1756 —
Failure at first of the Enterprise — ^Angels poor Advisers — Stephen
Penny — Second Volume translated into English and published
cheaply in parts — Lewis's Advertisement — William Law reads
and scolds — Characteristics of the 18th Century — Goldsmith on
the Bible — Common-Sense better than Learning — Swedenborg in
praise of Common-Perception ... ... ... ... 310
CHAPTER V.
The Arcana C<£L£Stia.
Bulk of the AVork explained— Limits of our Review — First eleven
Cliapters of Genesis symbolic and not matter-of-fiict History —
ITie Most Ancient Church — Adam was a Church selected from a
Race which lived as Beasts— The Days of Creation symbolic of
the ascent from the Animal to the Man— Canaan the land of the
Adamites — Their simple Domestic Life— Their Food— Their In-
tercourse by Facial Movements — Their peculiar Rcr^piration —
oozrrsNTS of the fibst yolumb. xxi
Their WUdom without Books — Their Perception of the meaning
of Nature — No formal Worship, their lives being one Song of
Praise— Their Fall through Pride— Pride dissected— The Fall
gradual — Factitious Genealogies of Genesis — Final Destruction of
the Adamites — Their Hells and Heavens — The Ancient Church —
Inferiority to its Predecessor — Scriptures of the Ancient Church —
Preserved to this day among the Tartars — Noah represents the
beginning of the Ancient Church — ^Its wide Diffusion — Predomi-
nance of Wisdom in its Members — Charity their Distinction —
Their Delight in the Science of Correspondences — Glory of the
Ancient Church — Its Decline and Fall into Idolatry — ^Hells of
the Ancient Church — Allegory exchanged for History — ^The
Jewish Church — Abraham an Idolater — Moses taught the Jews
the name of Jehovah — Egyptian Miracles — Selfish Jacob the
type of the Jews — Their Worship of Jehovah— Their Spiritual
Ignorance — ^Their Avarice — ^Their Pride and Cruelty — ^In what
sense the Jews were chosen — Jews as Representatives — Repre-
sentation independent of Character — Land of Canaan — ^Why the
Jews were suffered to extirpate the Canaanites — ^The Jews, their
Land, Law and Worship all symbolic — Our interest in Judaism —
The Jews ignorant of their own Symbolism — Cause of this
Ignorance — Use of the Jewish Church — Jewish History a Divine
Revelation — Why God became incarnate in Mary — How He
rejected all He assumed from her — How He thereby became
manifest as Man and reduced the Universe to Order — The
Christian Church — The Series of Four Churches — A limping
Analogy — Desolation of the contemporary Church — ^The Preva-
lent Philosophy — The Last Judgement at hand — Character of
Souls from Christendom — Gentiles will form a New Church —
The Chinese — History of Man is the History of the Church —
Humanity in Heaven, on Earth, and in Hell knit together — This
Chapter merely a thread drawn from the great coil of the ^Arcana
CHAPTER VI.
London and Stockholm.
London Lodgings and Streets — Moravians and their secret tenets —
Quakers and their atrocious Practices — Their lot in Hell — Moses
in Cheapside — King David and his badness — He tries to destroy
xxii ooirrENTs of the fibst volume.
Page.
Swedenborg — St. PanPs nefarious Character — Associates with
the worst Devils — ^His Lust after Power — Polhom dies and
witnesses his own Funeral — II is inward Character — Spirits see
through Swedcnborg*s eyes — Boys fighting in the Streets —
Charles XII. *a most horrid Devil ^ — Fights with his Wife, who
l>eats him — Characteristics and Fate — Charles XI. and Queen
re-united in Heaven — ^Ulrika Eleonora marries a German — Gus-
tavus Vasa an Idiot — Gustavus Adolphus an Adulterer — Con-
versation with Queen Christina — ^Bishop Svedberg appears in a
Dream — Execution of Brahe and Home — Brahe appears to
Bwcdciiborg — Conduct of Criminals afler Execution — Publishes
five Books in London ... ... ... ... ... 882
CHAPTER VIL
Heaven and Hell.
Bwe(lciiborg*s most readable Book — Heaven, the World of
KriRiTS, and Hell defined — Majority of Souls detained in the
World of Spirits — Character there reduced to Consistency — ^The
Kuling Love — Resurrection — ^Difficulty of believing in Death —
A Jew*s Experience — Meetings of Relatives and Friends — First
Days in the World of Spirits — Disguises dropped — Slow change
of Hypocrites — Judgement of Souls, with cases — ^None punished
for deeds done on ICarth, and Why— Scenery of World of Spirits
— Ways to lIcAven and Hell — Good and Evil Spirits discover the
gates which load to their eternal Homes — The Hells lie under
the Worid of Spirits— Stenches of the Hells— The World of
Spirits is not Purgatory — The Heavens — Constitution of
Heavenly Societies — Three Heavens, an Inmost, Outer, and
Outmost — Angels of Love inmost — Angels of Wisdom outer —
Angels of Obedience outmost — Two Kingdoms of Heaven — ^This
onlor of the Heavens represented in the Courts of the Jewish
Temple — The Universal Heaven is a Man — Explanation of the
Statement — Hobbes quoted — A very ancient Doctrine — Heaven
is a Man because its Maker and Life is Man — ^How a Spirit
produces his own Circumstances — ^The Sim of Heaven — Varia-
tions of its Heat and Light — Times and Seasons in Heaven — No
Clocks there — Angels have no idea of Time — Spaces in Heaven
and Travelling there— Homos of the Angels— Cities, Palaces,
OONTENTS OF THE FIRST TOLUlfE. XXIU
Gardens, and Upholstery — ^Angels are complete Men and Women
Their Beanty — ^To grow old m Heaven is to grow young —
Marriages of the Angels — ^Their Gkurments — ^Their Power — ^Their
Wisdom, with Illustrations — ^Worship and Temples of Heaven —
What is true Worship— Preachers — ^Innocence of the Angels —
Their Peace — Their Happiness — Their Language — How they
converse with Men — ^Intercourse of Angels and Devils with Men
— Experience of Swedenborg — Perils of Intercourse with Spirits
— Connection of Heaven with Man by the Word — Writing and
Books in Heaven — ^All Infants go to Heaven — ^Their Education —
A Girls* School — Gentiles in Heaven — ^Illustrations of Gentile
Character — Government in Heaven — ^Employments of the Angels
— All Angels and Devils once Men — ^Inmiensity of Heaven —
Character the only Qualification for Heaven — Not difficult to
qualify for Heaven — Poverty as dangerous as Riches — Saints —
Piety alone difficult and useless — Swedenborg's practical spirit —
The Hells — Societies of Hell — As many Hells as Heavens —
Ugliness of Devils — ^Infernal Scenery — Self-Love the Source of
every infernal Horror — Hell not horrible to its Inhabitants —
Darkness of Hell — Hell-Fire — Gnashing of Teeth — ^No King
Satan — Government of Hell — ^The Whip its Sceptre — Hell a
Workhouse — ^Equilibrium between Heaven and Hell — Difficulties
of this Statement — ^The Lord casts none into Hell — ^Who will
believe these Reports ? ... ... ... ... ... 405
CHAPTER VIIL
TiiE Planets and their People.
Manner of Swedenborg's acquaintance with the Planets stated —
Mercury — Passion of its Spirits for information — ^Their Dis-
cussion with Swedenborg— Venus — ^Two classes of Inhabitants —
Mars— Best Spirits of our Solar System come from Mars — Their
Worship, Pood and Habits — Jupiter — Densely peopled — Gen-
tleness of the Inhabitants — Care of their Faces, and Conversa-
tion thereby — Large Horses — Spirits of Jupiter view this Earth
through Swedenborg's eyes — Their curious carriage — Their
delight in long Meals — ^Their simple Fare — ^Innocence — Ignorance
of Science —Houses —Worship — Marriage —Death — Saturn—
Religious Knowledge — Habits and Food— Great Belt— Tue
ZXIT OOKTENTS OF THE FIB8T YOLUICE.
Moon — ^Its Inhabitants are Dwarfis — Their mode of Speech —
All MoonB inhabited — Uranus and Neptune passed over —
Eiplanation of the ovorsight — ^The Sun — Described as 'Pore
' Fire* — Why the Lord was bom on oar Earth — Oar place in the
Grand Man — Five Earths visited, and many carioas details
given of their Inhabitants — ^What is to be thought of oar
Traveller? — Our Preference for our own World ... ... &06
APPENDIX.
Note L— Swedenboro at Upsala... ... ... ... 639
St/TZ IT. — The Academies of Sciences of Upsala and
Htockuolm ... ... ... ... . . ... 539
S<fTt III.— Swedenik)eo*s Salary... ... ... ... 539
C*atau)oue of Swedenboro's Writings ... ... ... 540
Index to botu Volumes ... ... ... ... ... 557
CHAPTER I.
JESPER SVEDBERG.
SwEDENBORG taught that a man takes his soul from his
father, and his body from his mother — a dogma which we need
not impUcitlj accept in order to feel an interest in some facts
concerning his own stock.
His father, Jesper Svedberg, was a notable man in Sweden,
and, from a humble origin, rose to the bishopric of Skara. He
was the son of Daniel Isaksson, a copper smelter, in Fahlun, and
was bom on the 28th of August, 1653. After a custom of the
time, not yet extinct, and which produces many new and strange
surnames, he was called, not Isaksson, but Svedberg, after the
homestead of Sveden, which his parents owned. How Sved-
berg developed into Swedenborg will in due course be told.
Daniel Isaksson and his wife Anna were pious, industrious,
and poor, and had quite a flock of children, whom they brought
up in ^ a godly, severe, and serious manner.' ' My mother,'
writes Jesper, ' was to me all that Monica was to Augustine.'
Isaksson reckoned his family the source of all his blessings,
and that they were to him means of income and prosperity.
After dining, he would sometimes say, ' Thank you, my
* children, for dinner ! I have dined with you, and not you with
* me. God has given me food for your sake ;' a speech pregnant
with that wisdom which is foolishness to the world, that takes
Malthus for a prophet.
Isaksson's cheerftd faith was continually justified in plenty,
and crowned at last in abundance beyond his hopes. He
formed one of a party of twenty-four to open a deserted
B
JESPER^g BOYHOOD.
copper mine flooded with water, and by its yield he became
one of the richest miners in his district.
Our boy Jesper, when in his sixth year, was playing with
his brother by the mill-dam, which was running furiously,
swollen with the spring floods. The brother got upon the
cross-bar of the sluice, and defied Jesper to follow. Jesper at
once sprang up, tiunbled into the stream, and was borne down
to the mill wheel in such a way that it was stopped with his
feet. Alarm was given, and after much trouble he was taken
out as dead, but with many pains he was revived. * From
* that day,' he tells us, * I determined to commend myself,
^ morning and evening, to the hand of God and the keeping
' of his holy Angels.'
He was sent to a school at Fahlun kept by a drunken master,
nicknaiued Ill-Peter, whose habits and firee use of the rod dis-
gusted Jesper. He loved books ; his Bible he read constantly,
alone and to others, and was delighted when he could find an
audience before whom he could play at preaching. These and
other signs satisfie<l his parents that he was destined for the
ministry. To see a son in the pulpit is an ambition common
alike to many a lowly Swedish and Scottish home.
At thirteen they therefore sent him to college, first to
Upsala for three years, and then to Lund. At Lund he had a
relative. Professor Holm, who drilled him thoroughly in logic
and metaphysics, to which he had a strong dislike. At a
scholastic discussion he took occasion to shew what he thought
of his studies, by reading an address crammed with metaphysical
jargon, which set the company in roars of laughter. Samuel
Puffendorf, who had been drawn to Lund, as Pnjfessor of In-
ternational Law, by King Charics XL, applauded the youth's
performance ; the great jurist having a supreme contempt for
pedantry.
Svedberg's life at Lund shewed a marked change from that
at Upsala, as he with much naivet<$ tells us. * WTien at ITpsala,
* I went al>out with blue stockings and Swedish leatluT shoes,
JE8PER SVEDBERG AT COLLEGE. 3
' and a plain blue cloak. I did not dare to go into church, but
^ stopped at the font, close behind the men^s pews. But in Lund
^ I became worldly like my companions. I sported a wig, black
' and long, a fine great-coat, a sash as then worn by laymen,
' and thought nobody was like me, and that common folks
^ should clear out of my way, and make obeisance to me.^
The constant presence of Spirits good and evil, and at times
open intercourse with them, was Svedberg's assured faith. He
knew that he consorted with an Angel, who assisted him in all
affairs, and protected him in all dangers. When at college, he
had a vision, in which, like St. Paul, he saw and heard things
unspeakable. After preaching at Hoby, near Lund, on the
third Sunday after Trinity, in 1673, towards nightfall there
were heard in the vacant church, where there was no organ,
loud voices singing psalms. All the people of the hamlet
heard the ravishing sounds. ^ From that time,^ he tells us, ^ I
* held in awful reverence the offices of Divine worship, knowing
^ that God^s Angels were peculiarly present during their trans-
^ action.' In remembrance of this manifestation of angelic
power, he annually celebrated the third Sunday after Trinity
as ' The Great Festival of Great Sinners.'
' Whilst a student,' he relates, ' God kept mc from evil
' company. To be with holy men, and to read the works of
^ those who had written about the Bible, and whose fame is
^ spread through the learned world, was my chief joy. God's
* Angel once stood by me and said, " What are you reading
^ " there?" I replied, " I read the Bible, Scriver, (whose Treasure
^ ^^for Souls I esteem more than all gold and silver) Liitkeman,
* " Jo. Amdt, Kortholt, Grossgebaur, Jo. Schmidt, and others."
' The Angel then asked, " Do you understand what you read in
* " the Bible ?" I answered, " How can I understand when no
* " one interprets for me ?" Then the Angel said, " Get Gteier,
* " J. and S. Schmidt, Dieterich, Tamov, Gerhard, and Crell's
* " Biblical Concordance,^^ I said, " Some of these I have and
' " the others I will procure." Then spoke the Angel, " Blessed
b2
4 PROFE880R BttUNNER.
'"is he that readcth, and they that hear the words of tliis pn>-
' " phecy, and keep those things which are written therein," and
' " If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them."
' I sighed, praying that by the help of God's spirit I might
' giv(» each minute of my life to His most holy will. Thereon
* the Angel blessed me, I thanked him hmnbly, and he
* departed.'
At twenty-one he returned to Upsala and entered himself
as a candidate for a theological bursary. M. Brunner, the
Professor of Theology ran his eye over the young man, and
asked him if he hoped to become a clergyman in a courtier's
dress. He did not require a second hint ; off went the gay
clothes and he re-appeared in a becoming garb. Brunner
discerned a good heart in Svedberg and took him to his home
as tutor to his son Sebastian. ' In Bnmner's house,' he says,
' I learnt many good things in morals as well as learning, and
' above all to lead a pious, righteous, and orderly life. Brunner
* was a spiritual man in speech, manners, clothes, yea throughout
* his whole being.' Brunner allowed him to occupy his pulpit,
and after his death in 1679 Svedberg continued to officiate for
three years in his parish. He published ^A Short Sermon on
* the Premature Death of the Iiet\ M. Brunner^ D,D.^ Professor
* at Upsala and Rector in the Parish of Dannmark^ which was
as the letting out of water ; for from that time forth throughout
his long- career he plied the printing press almost incessantly'.
* I can scarcely believe,' he says, ' that anybody in Sweden
' has written so much as I have done ; since, I think, ten carts
' could scarcely carry away what I have written and printed at
' my own expence, yet there is much, verily there is nearly as
' much not printed.'
In 1682 he took the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, in
1683 he was ordained priest, and the same year was appointed
Chaplain to the King's Regiment of Cavalry Life Guards.
Aged 30, and with a reasonable provision for life, Sved-
berg thought he might now take a wife; and on the 16th of
MAUR1E8 AND OUKS ABUOAD. O
December, 1683, he married Sara, (laughter of Albrecht
Behm, Assessor of the Royal College of Mmes. Her father
and family were wealthy, and she brought him a considerable
dowry, with which he resolved to travel and see the world
outside Sweden. After spending st>me six months with his
young wife he obtained a year's ftirlough, and about Mid-
sunmier, 1684, sailed for England.
To London and Oxford he gave three months. He made
the acquaintance of Fell, Bishop of Oxford, with whom he
had much conversation on ecclesiastical union, telling him
that ' it could never be effected save by the -hand of God,
* prayer, and a peaceful mind.' He was deeply impressed
'with the sanctified lives of the English clergy, and the strict
* observance of Sunday by the people.' Paris he next visited,
and ^ was much pleased to see the care the Catholic Church
* took of the poor ; and how ladies of quality dressed in mean
^ garments, sought out the sick and houseless, and ministered to
* them with as much tenderness as if they had been their blood-
* relations.' In Strasburg he lived some time at the house of
the theologian Bebelius, where he met and enjoyed the company
of the learned Sebastian Schmidt. These two men he used to
speak of afterwards as his spiritual fathers. Spener, the
leader of the Pietists, he wished to visit ; but he was then
ill in bed, and he had to suppress his longing for com-
munion with him. In 1685 he left Strasburg, and went to
Heidelberg, Mannheim, &c. At Mannheim he met a Lutheran
clergyman, who tried his patience sadly with a tedious
disquisition concerning the then flagrant controversy as to
the propriety of saying Unser Vater^ Our Father, according
to the German idiom, instead of Vater Unser^ Father Our,
as Luther had done, following the Latin, Pater Noster. At
Frankfort he saw Ludolph, the only man he met in all his
journey who could talk Swedish. Ludolph had travelled
in Sweden, liked the Swedes, but told Svedberg to *my
* country's shame that there was no such thing as a Swedish
6 S££K8 OUT PIOUS MEN.
' grammar in existence.' Down the Rhine he passed into
Holland, seeing its cities, and then by sea to Hamburg^
where he lived for ten weeks in the house of Edzardius, a
learned orientalist, zealous for the conversion of the Jews,
and an indefatigable clergyman. He exercised the young
people of his church every Simday in the catechism, to
Svedberg's great satisfaction. ' It is not to be described,'
he writes, * how piously and seriously this holy man lived.
^ He laid his hands every day on the heads of his children, and
^ blessed them as Jacob did his sons, and Christ little children.
' God bless hifiw soul, and give him His eternal rest ! '
Svedberg asked Edzardius what language we should use in
Heaven. The Doctor was silent. Then said Svedberg, * I
* think it will be the language of Angels. As the Angels
* speak Swedish when conversing with Swedes, German with
' the Germans, Englisli with the English, and so on, I shall have
' to talk with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in Swedish, and they
* will answer in the same ; and when they talk to one another
* in Hebrew, I shall know what they say, for I understand that
* tongue.'*
Svedberg returned to Stockholm in August, 1685, and was
made glad by the sight of a son, bom to him in the November
of his absence, and named Albrecht after his grandfather.
The year of travel he had enjoyed proved a seed-time in his
existence; in it he acquired methods and impulses which
through life he turned to fruitful practice.
To his regiment, consisting of 1,200 men, he resolved to be a
chaplain indeed, and commenced by exercising them thoroughly
in the catechism. ' To this,' he tells us, ' they were quite un-
* Says Emanuel 8wedenborg, * Every Spirit and Angel, when conversing
with a man, speaks to him in his mother-tongue ; thus French with a
Frenchman, English with an Englishman, Qreck with a Greek, Arabic with
an Arabian, and so forth. With one another Spirits and Angels converse in
a universal spiritual language, which every one after death utters sponta-
neously, without difficulty and without instruction.'' — Conjugiai Love^ n. 326,
published 1766.
HIS WORK A» CHAPLAIN. 7
used, BO that when they saw me coming, as they afterwards told
me, they quivered more than they ever did before the enemy ;
but when I commenced telling them in a quiet way stories
from the Bible, and strengthening them in Christian faith and
lite they began to like me so well that they did not care to go
away when their time was up and another detachment was
coming ia, so that between the two I was nearly trampled
down. The officers, likewise, sat at the table listening and
exchanging with me good and edifying words. At one yearly
muster of the regiment I told them that next year I should
give every man a catechism who could read print. I took
down the names of all those who could then read to the number
of 300. Next year I found 600 so qualified, and it cost me
six hundred copper dollars to redeem my promise. I went
immediately to King Charles XL and told him of the expense
I had been put to, and he at once took up his purse and gave
me a handiul of silver without counting it.^
The regiment did not take up all his time, and he officiated
as assistant to the court chaplain. His free and honest
preaching won the King's heart, and he commanded his services
as a regular court chaplain. He pleaded hard in his sermons for
strict ecclesiastical discipline, a sabbatical observance of Sunday,
and other reforms, which advocated with blunt fervour in die
midst of transgressors earned him much dislike, and involved
him in many troubles. One day the King told him, " Thou
" hast many enemies," to which he answered, " The servant of
^ the Lord, your majesty, is not good for much who has not
*' enemies. Look at the Prophets, Apostles, and Christ himself,
*' what foes and detractors had they not !" On another occasion,
the King said, " Ask what you like and I will give it to you."
It required a strong head to carry such favour, but Svedberg
appears to have been equal to it. * From that day,' he tells
us, ' I became more earnest and wary in all I said and did. I
* asked nothing for myself or mine, no not even half a stiver J
' but spoke to the King freely concerning men meritorious and
<;UNVEK8AT1«IN WITH CIIAULES XI.
ific'ii |N>or, and he always attended to my dedres. I also
plea^lfMl for his favour for schools, colleges, and the circulation
of relipous boolcH. When he asked me who should be appointed
U9 such and such a living, I named the person I thought, saying
he is serious and one of the ' old sort/ and he straightway got
thi; place. Hence many good men came into rich livings to
their happy surprise, and without any idea of who it was that
ha^l singled them out for promotion. As I found every day
frei;r access to his Majesty I prayed with my whole heart unto
(jitnl that I might not become proud nor misuse my oppor-
tuniticH, but that He should apply me to His glory and service;
and that I might fulfil my every duty with watchftilness, and
never forget that court favour is variable, and that I was girt
aliout with gossips and backbiters. Moreover, I laid down
thes^; two rules for myself ; first. To meddle in no affaurs
[K>litical or mundane with which I had no business ; and
second, Never to speak ill of any one should he even be my
worst enemy and persecutor.'
APPOINTED TO VINGAKEK. 9
CHAPTER II,
JESPER SVEDBERG AT HOME AND IN THE WORLD.
In this time of royal favour, on the 29th of January, 1688,
was Svedberg^s second son bom. He called him Emanuel, a
name, he thought, * which should continually remind him of
* the nearness of God, and of that interior, holy, and mysterious
^imion in which, through faith, we stand to our good and
* gracious God.'
In 1690 the King appointed Svedberg to the rural living
of Vingaker, but he did not leave Stockholm to occupy it
until 1692. He found the widow and children of his pre-
decessor were badly off, so he left them for a year in possession
of the parsonage, with its fields and meadows, allowed them
half the income, and paid all their taxes ; ' and,' he says, ^ I
' lost nothing thereby, for I am of the firm opinion that one
* derives more blessings from the prayers of widows, orphans,
' and the wretched than from the richest living.'
His connection with the people at Vingaker was brief;
but, he says, * the days I spent among them were the sweetest
* of my life. They received me as they might have done an
^ Angel. My love for them, and theirs for me, was more than
* words can express. They pulled down the large, old, wom-
^ out vicarage, and built me a new one with many handsome
* rooms, without any cost to me worth mentioning. Scarcely a
^ day passed in which they did not bring us more than was
* needful for our domestic economy ; a sort of kindness which
' at first gladdened me much, but afterwards oppressed and
* frightened me.'
10 VINGAKER AND THEN UP8ALA.
They were a curious people at Vmgaker. Before Svedberg's
time Queen Christina appointed Doctor Baazius, a young man,
to the living. He went down to preach to his flock, and when
service was over, he asked them how they liked him. All
were silent. He repeated his question, but received no answer.
Again he repeated it, but still there was no response. Then
he said, " I can easily see I have not satisfied you ; and be it
" so. I have been sent here by my queen and bishop, else I
" should not have come." Thereupon an old white-haired man
stepped out of the crowd and said, " God be praised, you have
" a beard; you are welcome ! " Baazius asked in amaze, "What
" do you want with my beard ? " To this the ancient peasant
answered, " People said you were a child ; this is no parish for
" infants ; God be thanked, you have a beard; you are welcome.
" Give our compliments to the queen, and thank her."
Svedberg, after his appointment to Vingakcr, received
oflFers of two or three other livings, which, because there was
strife in one, and his acceptance of another would evoke envy,
he declined. His sudden rise, his restless, out-spoken, and
aggressive character inevitably created him many enemies,
and led him into many difficulties; but in all he conducted
himself warily, and held his own with fair success. * The
* more,' he tells us, ' I had to sufler from hatred and malice,
* the more I found the grace and love of God to overflow
* within my heart.'
When in Stockholm in the summer of 1692, removing the
last of his furniture to the new house at Vingaker, he was sur-
prised by a letter from the King appointing him third Professor
of Theology at Upsala. He went straight to Charles and
pleaded that he might be excused as he had been quite unused
to college work for fuU ten years. The King insisted on his
compliance and Svedberg yielded, saying, " In God's name it
^^ cannot be helped. I shall do my best and fly to God for help;
*' but your Majesty must protect my back." " I will do that,"
«aid the King. Svedberg stretched out his hand saying, " Will
NEW TBANSLATION OF THE BIBLE. 11
^^ your Majesty give me your hand as an assurance ?" which
Charles at once cordially did. The King shewed him still
further faTour, for ere he had been a month settled in the
university he made him rector of Upsala ; then his salary as
professor was increased ; the living of Dannmark, where he had
officiated when a student, was presented to him ; and in 1694
he was made first Professor of Theology and Dean of Upsala.
One of Svedberg's fears about going to Upsala arose from
the aversion which the high and dry scientific theologians who
dwelt there had to his hearty religion which they scoffed at as
pietism. They spread a report through the university that
^ when that pietist, Svedberg, comes, no student will be allowed
* to wear a wig or carry a sword.' About wigs and swords he
did not trouble himself, and the ^ pietist^ proved quite a
favourite with the students. Other affairs, greater than
students' wigs and swords, disturbed his peace.
It had been decided to revise the Swedish Bible and
improve the translation, and a committee had been appointed
for that purpose in 1686, and on it Svedberg was placed, on
the 13th of August, 1691. To put Svedberg on a conmiittee
was equivalent to working it at high pressure, and by the
22nd of June, 1692, the revised Bible was ready. Greorge
Burchardt, a Grerman printer, settled in Stockholm, was
dispatched abroad to buy paper, types, and tools for its
production ; and Svedberg, on the King's guarantee, supplied
ready money for the undertaking out of his wife's and a ward's
funds. Burchardt returned with one foreman and twelve
printers, and a stock of paper shortly followed, which had been
purchased in Grermany, Holland, and Basle. Meanwhile grave
doubts had been cast on the accuracy of the translation, and it
was felt impossible to allow it to go to press. Delay followed
delay, and the printers stood idle, to Svedberg's intense
mortification and loss. The new Bible did not appear until
several years afterwards, and then with only a few alterations
in orthography.
12 A NEW PSALM DOClK.
Undeterred by this disappointmeiit, he entered on the
preparation of a new Psahn Book with a few select asso-
ciates, who worked quietly together over verse and music
until the book was completed. It was then submitted to the
church, passed through the ordeal of two committees, was
highly approved, and with a few changes and ad^tious it
was ordered to be printed, and in 1694-5 appeared in
4to., 8vo., 12mo., and 16mo. Now, when success seemed
assured, trouble began. Xo sooner was the Psalm Book
published than shrieks that its verse was laden with pietistic
heresy rose up through the land. ^ Professor Crispin Jemfeldt,
* of Dorpat,' says Svedberg, * a quarrelsome, bold, and impu-
' dent man, wrote a great many scurrilous observations on the
^ Psalm Book ; and his kiiiBuian, the Bishop of Westeras, sided
^ with him, a prelate who had never done anything to advance
' religion, but spent his years in adding field to field, and had
' stored up in his house whole chests of gold and silver.' The
friends and foes of the Psalm Book fought for some time with
varied success. Jenifeldt told the Kuig to his face that if he did
not condenm the book, that its heresies would cause a religious
war, whereon the King seized him by the throat, and da^ed him
against the wall. Jcmfeldt was taken ill, and in a few days died,
and was proclaimed a martyr in the cause of orthodoxy. The
upshot was, that after many consultations with the bishops and
a general confession that it was only malignity that found heresy
in Svedberg's lines, the King thought it politic to prohibit * the
* Svedbergian Psalm Book,' as it was called.
Burchardt, the printer, between the Bible and the Psalm
Book, was ruined, and relates Svedberg, * was never quite right
* in his head afterwards. I, too, lost much money, but Grod com-
* pensated me with full interest for all I suffered;' which, when
we think of Burchardt, seems scarcely fair. It was at this pain-
fid juncture that the King made him Dean of Upsala, to his
intense delight. ' It is incredible and indescribable,' he tells us,
' what consolation and peace are felt by the servants of the Lord
THE HOME IN UP8ALA. 13
^ when raised in a high and holy calling ; and contrariwise how
* down-hearted they must be who experience no such elevation.'
Upsala, where Svedberg now lived, was a pleasant city
of some 5,000 inhabitants, set in a wide undulating plain, and
made up of low-built houses of wood and stone, surrounded
with gardens. In the centre of the city stood the grand cathe-
dral, esteemed the finest Gothic building in Scandinavia, where
Sweden's kings of old were crowned, and the bones of many
rested. Built around this * beautiful house of God' in a
spacious square were the university buildings; two houses in
which Svedberg owned as professor and rector. Here in this
fine square our boy Emanuel spent his childhood and found his
playground.
Besides lecturing as professor, Svedberg was indefatigable
as a preacher and pastor. On all Sundays and holidays and every
Friday he preached, and regularly catechised the students and
youth of the city. His zeal was infectious. * All came willingly
^ and joyfully ; even the parents came imasked and stimulated
' their children.'
His house we may readily imagine was not a dull one ; for
wherever Svedberg might be, he was an unfailing source of stir
and bustle ; and in addition, he had now eight or nine children
to chase away any remnant of priestly or learned gloom which
mi^t linger within the walls of an old house in Upsala Square.
There were boys, Albrecht, Emanuel, Eliezer and. Jesper,
and Daniel who died in babyhood ; and girls Anna, Hedwig,
Catharina and Margaretta. To find room for this large com-
pany he pulled down one of his houses in the square, and set
about rebuildmg it on a more commodious scale.
About the names of these his children the Bishop gossips
so pleasantly that we may listen to him for a little.
' Moreover, I kept myself humble, and sought no sjK)nsors
^ of rank for my children as many do. I shall give the reasons
* why I called my sons, Emanuel, Eliezer and Jesper, and
* none after their grandfathers, or any others of the family.
14 RVEDBEBO ON HIS CHILDREN'S SAUESL
(Albreclit, the eldest, was bom during my timTds in fiyrngn
partB, and his mother named him after her fiufaer.) I do not
find in the whole Bible a mngle case in whidi diildren re-
ceived the names of their parents or fore&therB. I will only
mention the patriarch Jacob and King David. The fonner
had holy, celebrated, glorious ancestors, and he had twdve
s^ms, not one of whom was called Abraham, Isaac, or Jaook
King David had also many sons, not one of whom he called
JcHse, or David. Solomon had also many sons, none of
whom he called David, Jesse, or Solomon, and among his
numerous descendants there were many Kings and Princes,
and not one was called Solomon, or David. This good
cuHtoH), however, had, before the time of Christ, given way,
as is evident from the history of John the Baptist, whom at
first they wished to name after his father Zacharias, (Lake
i. AO) which Ih a noble and significant name, memaria dommi^
in order that he might be ever mindful of the Lord.
' Hereby, I by no means presume to censure those, who
call tiu^ir children after their own names; yet I hope and
expect Uiat nobody will blame my maimer since I have the
Jiibhi and the examples of many Saints on my side. I have
the full conviction, that only such names should be given to
children as may awaken in them the fear of God, and keep
tlieni mindful of propriety and virtue; and not, as many
thoughtless parents do, give improper names to their children,
forgetting the answer which a bad name enabled the prudent
Abigail to give to King David concerning her husband
Nabal, (which means in Hebrew 'folly'). 'Let not my
l^>rd, I pray thee, set his heart against this man of Belial,
even Nabal : for as his name is, so is he ; Nabal is his name,
and follv is i^4th Iiim.
' Eliezer, my son's name, signifies 'God is my help;' and
God has l)ecn his friend and has graciously helped him. He
was a pious child, made good progress, and was called home
by a happy death in the 25th year of his age.
THE BOY EMANUEL^S THOUGHTS. 15
* Jesper, my youngest son, was called after me merely
^ because he was bom on the same day, and in the same hour,
^ as myself, who first saw the light of the world on the 28th of
^ August, 1653.
^ I am a Sunday child, and my wife, the mother of my
^ children, was also a Sunday child, and all my children are
^ Sunday children, except Catharina, who was bom at Upsala
^ on the 3rd day of Easter.
^ I have never had my daughters in Stockholm, where
^ many reside in order to leam fine manners, but where they
^ also leam much that is worldly and hurtful to the soul.'
Emanuel, writing long aft;erwards in his old age to Dr.
Beyer in 1769, describes his thoughts in these Upsala years : —
* With regard to what passed in the earliest part of my
* life, about which you wish to be informed : from my fourth to
* my tenth year, my thoughts were constantly engrossed in
* reflecting on God, on Salvation, and on the Spiritual Affec-
^ dons of Man. I often revealed things in my discourse which
^ filled my parents with astonishment, and made them declare
' at times, that certainly the Angels spoke through my mouth.
' From my sixth to my twelfth year, it was my greatest
* delight to converse with the Clergy concerning Faith ; to
* whom I often observed that Charity or Love is the Life of
* Faith, and that this quickening Charity or Love is no other
^ than the Love of one's neighbour ; that God vouchsafes this
^ Faith to every, one ; but, that no one obtains it unless he
' practises that Charity.
^ I knew no other belief, at that time, than that God is the
* Creator and Preserver of Nature ; that He gives men under-
^ standing, good inclinations, and other gift» derived fix)m these.
' I knew nothing, at that time, of the systematic or dog-
^ matic kind of Faith which teaches that God the Father imputes
^ the righteousness or merits of the Son to whomsoever, and at
' whatsoever time He wills, even to the impenitent : and had I
16 YOUNu Emanuel's theolooy.
^ heard of such a faith, it would have been then, as now, quite
^ unintelligible to me.'
Writing about the same time of the Trinity, and opposing
the notion of there being three persons, or three gods, in the
Godhead, he remarks : —
* From my earliest years I could never admit into my mind
* the idea of more gods than one ; and I have always received,
* and do still retain, the idea of one God alone.'*
A precocious child, indeed, and badly instructed for a Pro-
testant clergyman's son ! some will exclaim.
As to the precocity, we must remember that the Bible and
theology were the perpetual talk of his father's house; that
he, his brotliers and sisters, almost lived in tlie Church, and
were daily hearing or talking about sermons ; that they were
constantly under interrogation as to what they read and learned;
and that Emanuel's thoughts were still fiui;her stimulated by
the admiration which heard the Angels speak in his utterances.
Into these memories of his childhood Swedenborg inserts
the doctrine of the New Jerusalem of his prime. Unques-
tionably that doctrine was rooted in his yoimg thoughts; but we
are not to believe that he delivered it in stiff phrases about ' the
* Spiritual Aflfections of Man,' telling the clergy that ' Charity
* or Love is the Life of Faith,' and that ' God vouchsafes this
* Faith alone to those who love their neighbours,' and so on.
When he wrote out these recollections he had forgotten how
children talk, and although we may find in them the matter of
his young thought we need not suppose that he reproduced
the manner.
To childhood the deepest questions of life present them-
selves bodily, and we esteem that manhood happy which is
able to unravel and understand some members thereof. I
know a child, who is now wondermg why God does not kill
the Devil ? That little boy may live to four score, and become
learned in all the lore of the universities, but his skill will be
* Vera Christiana Beligio, No. 16, publiBhed 1771.
HIS MOTHER AND BROTHER ALBRECHT DIE. 17
thought great if he can demonstrate in a few cases — Why the
Divine Wisdom suffers error, sin, disease and pain to exist ; or
in other words, Why Gpd does not kill the Devil.
It must be allowed that after the fashion of thought, which
is commonly esteemed pure Protestantism, Svedberg and his
household were far from orthodox. Emanuers creed certainly
was not sound, and he suffered no rebuke for heresy; but con-
trariwise was listened to as a voice from Heaven.
About Emanuel there was a strange peculiarity in his
respiration. He could hold his breath for a long time without
any sense of suffocation. When on his knees at morning and
evening prayers, and when absorbed in thought, the action of
his lungs became suspended or tacit, as is the case with one
in a trance. This fact should be noted ; as it will re-appear
with important consequence in the sequel of our narrative.
The summer 1696 was a sad one in the home in Upsala
Square. On the 17th of June, Svedberg's wife died, leaving
him a widower with eight children, the eldest of whom was
not yet twelve.
Of her Svedberg writes : * Although she was the daughter
' of an Assessor, and the wife of a Kector in Upsala, and of a
* wealthy family, she never dressed extravagantly. As every
^ woman in those days wore a sinful and troublesome fontanye
^ or top-knot, she was obliged to do as others did and wear it :
^ but hearing that a cow in the island of Gothland had, with
^ great labour and pitiable bellowing, brought forth a calf with
^ a top-knot, she took her own and her girls^ hoods and threw
' them all into the fire ; and she made a vow that she and her
^ daughters, as long as they were under her authority, should
' never more put such things on their heads.'
Sorrow was not exhausted in the loss of the wife and
mother. Ere six weeks had elapsed, Albrecht, on the 27th of
July, fell sick and died. As he lay on his deatli-bed, Svedberg
asked him what he should do in Heaven. ^' 1 will pray for thee,
" dear father, and for my brothers and sisters," was his answer.
c
18 LAST DAYS OF KINTi CHARLES XL
Svedberg pondered these words of Albrecht in his heart.
They confirmed him in his belief that death effects no division
of Souls, and that uitercourse and service are possible between
Angels and Men. Moved by this thought, he composed an
epitaph on his wife and son, commending himself and his
children to their prayers. Xo sooner was it set up, than an
outcry was raised, that Professor Svedberg had turned Papist,
and had taken to the invocation of Saints. The tale was
carried to the King, and into his presence Svedberg followed
it. "Do you not believe," Svedberg asked, "that tlie late
" Queen, your wife, prays for you and your children in the
" Kingdom of Heaven ?" He desired the King that he might
be allowed to illustrate and defend his doctrine in a public
discourse, but Charles knowing the mischievous and useless
controversy he would excite, repressed his ardour, and hushed
up the scandal.
In the spring of 1697 Charles XI. died, leaving a settled
and powerful kingdom, a fiiU treasury, and able ministers,
to his son Charles XII., then a boy of fifteen. Charles
XI. is reputed to have been a harsh king. He ruled, there
seems no doubt, with a severe will, taking lands from the
nobles, which he said they had alienated from the crown, and
effecting other changes in the state, which while they appear
to have conduced to the general welfare of his people, caused
much private suffering. To Svedberg he was ever friendly
and accessible. Shortly before his death he said to him : " I
" have ruled in Sweden three and twenty years. When I first
" became King I trusted everybody; now I trust nobody." To
which Svedberg replied, " That is not right. To trust every-
" body is foolish, for there are many wicked and silly people."
"The world is full of them," interposed Charles. "But to
" trust nobody," continued Svedberg, "is very bad, for there
" are many good, honest and wise men." " Ah, it Is now too
"late! "said the King.
( 19 )
CHAPTER III.
SVEDBERG'S SECOND MARRIAGE; LAST DAYS AT
UPSALA; AND BISHOPRIC.
SvEDBERO found he could not get on without a wife. Tlie
story of hi8 second courtship he must tell for himself. The
lidy was the daughter of a clergyman, and had been twice
a widow before Svedbcrg fancied her ; having been married
first to a merchant, and then to a judge.
*On St. Andrew's day, 1697, I celebrated, in a blessed
* hour, my wedding with my second most beloved wife, Mrs.
* Sara Bergia. I was not acquainted with her before ; I had
* never seen her, and did not know that she existed. I was
* unexpectedly informed of her piety, meekness, liberality to the
* poor, and that she was well off, good looking, a thrifty house-
* wife, and had no family ; in a word, she seemed a woman
* who would suit me well. I ¥rrote to her and laid bare my
' dioughts, and she acceded to my request. Two days before
* the wedding I went to Stockholm, whither she also, by agree-
* ment, repaired. I was put into a room where she was sitting
* alone, but I did not know and never imagined it was she, for
* no one had told me. I sat down beside her. We conversed
* for a long time about sundry matters, I talking to her as a
* perfect stranger. At length she said, " What do you think of
'"our bargain, Mr. Professor?" I repUed, " What bargain do
' " you refer to ? " " That which you have written about," she
'wid. " What have I written to you about? I do not know
' " what you mean ;" I answered. " Are we not," she said, "to
* ** be man and wife to-morrow ?" " Are you that person 1 " I
'exclaimed, and then we jumped up and confirmed our friend-
*^p by shaking? hand», and with a loving embrace.'
20 A HOUSE WARMIXa.
At the eiul of the autinnu of 1698 his new stone house in
Upsala Square was completed. Speaking of its erection he
says : ' I was constantly watching it, and am sure and can
' truly affinn tliat no hewing was done, and no stone set in its
' plac<^ with groans and unwilling minds, but all was carried on
' with diligence and joy. No noise was heard, no squabbles,
* no re^'iling, no curses.' His house-wanning was characteristic.
He invited all that could leave the hospital, and the paupers of
Upsala. He feasted them, and he, his wife and children waited
upon them at table. ' Everything passed off decently, and
* the day was wound up with song, prayers, and mutual bless-
* ings.' He obeyed his Lord's words, ' AMien thou makest a
' dinner or a supper, call not thy friends, nor thy brethren,
* neither tiij kinsmen, nor thy rich neighbours ; lest they bid
* thee again, and a recompense be made thee. But when thou
' makest a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind :
' and thou shalt be blessed ; for they cannot recompense thee :
' but thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the jusl.'
Presuming on the youth of Charles XII., three rulers, the
King of Denmark, Peter the Czar of Bussia, and the King
of Poland conspired to plunder Sweden of various out-lying
territories. They little imagined the energies hidden in the
Boy King, and the terrible disasters their craft would draw
upon them. They provoked Charles to war, and in war Charles
found the exercise and delight of his whole nature — "the
" whistle of bullets shall henceforth be my music," he said ;
and from that time, for nearly twenty years, to the end of his
life, northern Europe scarcely knew a year of peace.
Military glory is the most expensive thing in the world,
and Charles's wars pinched poor Sweden dreadfully. The
Clergy were used to pay one-tenth of their incomes in taxes,
but the King now demanded a second tenth. An exaction like
this was felt very keenly, and some of tlie Clergy laid their
complaint before the Chapter of Upsala. The Archbishop, a
gentle timid man, said the Clergy ought really to suffer quietly,
THE KING SPARES THE CLEKGY. 21
and wait for better times, and not embarrass the King when
he was preparing for war. At this speech up rose Svedberg
and replied, that if the Clergy sought unfair relief, they ought to
be admonished ; but if fair, the Chapter had no other choice
dian to lay their case before the King. " Well," said the other
members of the Chapter, " if you are bold enough, you had
" better go and see the King." "Bold I am," replied Svedberg,
"when duty prompts. Give me authority, and I will go to
"the King, confiding in God." His offer was at once accepted.
He started off to see Charles, and found him at Kungsor.
He arrived on a Saturday, and foimd all busy preparing for a
masquerade on Sunday. " Cannot you preach the masquerade
" out of the head of the King and his suite?" he asked the
astonished clergyman of the place. " Since you cannot, then
" I will try." On Sunday, Svedberg occupied the pulpit, and
delivered a sermon with his accustomed plainness and warmth
against *the profanation of the Sabbath by such sports.' "I
" fear," said he, " if the masquerade go on, Sweden will never
"forget the bloody shirts that will come out of this war." To
his joy, the masquerade was abandoned ; whereon he remarks,
^ A zealous Samuel or Nathan is a means of welfare to any
* kingdom, whilst a smooth-tongued Uriah works no end of evil.'
Svedberg sent his petition to the King, writing under his
name, 1 Moses, xlvii. 22. "What does that mean?" said
Charles. " It will be his cypher," said Count Piper. Some
one looked at a Bible and read : ' Only the land of the Priests
^ bought Joseph not ; for the Priests had a portion assigned
* them by Pharoah, and did eat their portion which Pharoah
* gave them : wherefore they sold not their lands. ' Then said
Charles, " Let the Clergy alone, and let them be taxed no
" more than before." With this decision, Svedberg returned in
triumph to his brethren in Upsala.
His connection with Upsala came to an end in the May of
1702 ; his years of service in the city and university he speaks
of with much satisfaction : — ' During the ten years I spent
22 U1»SALA IN FLAME8.
' in Upsala, God favoured me so much that there was notlung
^ but peace and goodwill among the teachers and students^
' although before Upsala had been a place of strife and bitter-
* ness.' Strangely enough, on the 17th of May, a few days
before he received notice of removal to a higher sphere, his
houses were burnt down. A great fire broke out, swept
romid Upsala-square, and laid the cathedral in ruins. All his
furniture and books were saved 'by the matchless love and
' daring of the students.' Two days after, he wrote at great
length to the Princess Ulrika Eleonora, in the absence of the
King, describing the fire and praying for relief for the sufferers.
The cause of the disaster he ascribes to ' the huge suis of the
* people,' and can plainly discern therein ' the Lord's cruel fire
' of wrath ;' to preaching and threatening the people are in-
different, therefore ' God preaches to us in this horrible fire,*
His own loss he reckons triflhig, ' if only the beautiful house
' of the Lord had been allowed to stand; a house which was the
' glory of Sweden, and in which many of Sweden's potentates
' had found rest for their bones.' He owns that in time of war
it is hard to afford means of help, ' but the money squandered
' on play-actors in Stockliohn might well be put to better pur-
' poses.' He ends in asking the throne ' to take pity on a
' shepherd of a miserable flock wailing ui ashes,' and subscribes
himself, 'Jesper Svedberg, a very greatly afflicted curer of
* souls.'
The woes of Upsala were ministered to, though happily
not at the cost of the play-actors, and on the 21st of May
Svedberg was appointed Bishop of Skara by Charles XII. in
a letter dated from Praga, near Warsaw. Writing of his
elevation, he says : — ' It was wholly unexpected. I can say
' with a clear conscience before Crod, who knows all, that I
' never asked for it, or opened my mouth about it, or took a
' step to get it ; and still less paid one farthing ; for I have
* always been an enemy to runners and buyers.'
As mKHi u» he was Hcttlcd at IJrunsbo, the si'at of the
EPISCOPAL LABOUKS AND DIFFICULTIES. 23
biahops of Skara, he set out on a visit to every priest in his
diocese, and repeated the circuit yearly, making his hand felt
in the remotest nooks and comers. He established a printing
office in Skara, and employed it chiefly in printing his sermons,
tracts, and books. His fame abroad caused the Swedish con-
gregations in London, Lisbon, and N. America to appoint
him tlieir bishop. To America he shipped again and again
large numbers of his condemned Psalm Book, which was freely
used in public worship by the Swedes there. Missions to the
heathen he ardently longed to set on foot, but was met with
little but apathy. He succeeded, however, in sending a few
clergymen to the American Indians, and for his efforts and
goodwill the English Society for the Propagation of the
Gospel in Foreign Parts elected him one of their members.
The bishopric of Skara did not in the least buy off Sved-
berg's importunities, or make him a bit more courtly. Charles's
wild and terrible wars every year pinched Sweden harder and
harder in men and money. As a proof of the extremity to
which he was reduced, he issued a decree that every rector of
a parish should fit out a dragoon, and every curate a foot
soldier. This Svedberg thought a cruel infliction, and he says,
' I took courage imto myself, and, seeking the help of God, sat
* down and wrote to Charles XIL, then in Poland, a mightily
* serious and powerful letter, dated 21st Dec, 1705.' He told
the King that the Clergy were as willing as any of his people
to help him to their utmost in his wars, and they only desired to
be dealt with equitably ; but the equipment of dragoons and
soldiers they found intolerable. ' If the least thing is wanting
* in their accoutrements, a clergyman has to hear and swallow
* hard words, scoffs and snubbing at the mustering table, whilst
' peasants and others stand by grinning and shewing their white
* teeth. Hence the priesthood is brought into contempt, the
* Holy Ghost is angered, and pastors lose control over their
* flocks.' He then describes how pitilessly the men servants
of parsons are carried off for soldiers, so that they have to
24 PROTECTS HIS CLEKGY FROM EXTORTION.
gather sticks in the woods, plough, thresh com, clean out
stables, and perform other menial services. ' I have myself
^ seen grey-headed servants of the Lord driving oxen at the
* plough until they dropped down with fatigue, and remained
* lying on the ground. The Clergy are forced to think more of
* guns, swords, and carbines, than of the word of God, and have
^ to waste their time in galloping about to musterings and
* reviews. Poor curates cannot buy the books their duties
' require ; they have no decent broad-cloth coats and cloaks,
^ but go about in plain home-spun ; and some have had to
* borrow money at usury, and even to sell their Bibles in
* order to rig out a soldier.' He then reminds the King of his
pious childhood, of the help God has given him in battle, even
as He did to heroes of old, like Jo^ua, Gideon and David,
and quotes Ezra vii. 24 — ' Also we certify you, that touching
* any of the Priests and Levites, singers, porters, Nethenims,
* or ministers of this house of God, it shall not be lawful to
* impose toll, tribute or custom upon them ;' praying him to
exempt in like manner the Lord^s priests from recruiting and
equipping dragoons and soldiers ; for he may be assured that
men so provided can never come to any luck in battle.
This letter he read to the Chapter of Skara and asked them
to sign it, but they demurred, fearing to give offence to the
King. "What have we to fear?" he pleaded; "we can be
" no worse than snubbed, and that will be the end of it." After
much persuasion the whole Chapter signed the letter.
Charles wrote home to afford the Clergy whatever relief
was possible, but as all the Clergy were not led on by con-
summate grumblers like Svedberg, nothing was taken from
their btirdens. He had two dragoons saddled on him, although
by order of the King he was exempt, being a sufferer by tlie
Upsala fire. * But,' says he, ' I paid and said nothing, for
' charity beareth all things, and seeketh not her own.'
There is a good story told of Bishop Svedberg's credulity,
but like too many good stories it is probably a fiction. Pray-
CASTS OUT DEVILS. 25
ing alone one evening in a church a young man called to him
fix)m aloft, " Svedberg, to-morrow thou shalt die." He heard
the voice as that of an Angel, and went home and solemnly
made preparation for his death.
He himself gives several accounts of exorcism and cures he
effected. * There was brought to me at Starbo a maid-servant
named Kerstin, possessed with Devils in mind and body. I
caused her to kneel down with me and pray, and then I read
over her, and she arose well and hearty, and quite delivered.
Three years after, Kerstin came to Brunsbo and entered my
service. One day she quarrelled with a fellow-servant, and
went out threatening to conunit suicide by suffocation in a
kiln. I was writing in my study, and felt restless and anxious,
and thoughts of Kerstin without cause kept flashing across my
mind. At last I could bear it no longer, and I went into the
kitchen and asked, " Where is Kerstin ? " "O," said her
neighbour, " she has not been here for some time ; she went
^^ out, saying she would go to the kiln and choke herself.'' I
ran to the kihi and found Kerstin lying in the smoke senseless.
She was carried into the house, and put in a bed like a piece
of wood. Then, after a while, I called to her in a loud voice,
" Wake up, and arise in the name of Jesus Christ 1 " Imme-
diately she recovered, got up, and conmienced to talk. Then
I strengthened her with the Word of God, and gave her a
good deal of Rhenish wine ; after which she went about her
duties as usual.'
Again he tells us ^ there was a rumour spread about me in
Holland, England, and elsewhere, in 1712-13, that I had
driven out the Devil through a little hole in the window, who
had come to me in the shape of an officer, and argued with
me about the state of Sweden, and how the war would end.
Perhaps it grew out of this true occurrence : — There was at
Skara, in the parish of Heiida, a woman who, for her terrible
crimes, was to be executed. She would not confess, and, after
a chaplain had laboured with her long and without effect, she
26 WORKS A CURE.
was brought to me at Brunsbo under guard. I took her into
my study, and there spoke to her the Word of God in the best
way I could, and in the most moving manner; and at last
brought her to confess all, and more than she was accused of,
and to repent sincerely. I assured her, by virtue of my office,
that she was pardoned, and on the following day she bravely
met her fate. Glory to God alone !
* In the year 1699, when I was at Starbo, one of my
servants had a dreadful pain in her elbow. It was much
swollen and nothing we applied did it any good, and for days
and nights she went about moaning without rest or sleep. At
midnight she came to the room where I was lying asleep with
my beloved wife, and prayed that I would for the sake of
Christ take away her pain, or slie must go and kill herself. I
rose^ touched her arm, and commanded the pain in the name
of Jesus Christ to depart, and in a moment the one arm was
well as the other. Glorv to God alone ! '
Svedberg was less a theologian than a zealous spiritual man
of business. Merely speculative and verbal theology he abhorred
as ' Devil Faith,' and thought ^ a man might hold any quan-
' tity of it, and yet it could not keep him from sinking into
^ Hell.' Preaching and catechising, writing and printing were
liis passion, and he kept stirring up his Clergy to similar
labours. Kepose he knew not. ' Never,' he writes, ^ was
^ miser more covetous of money than I have been of time. I
* have never willingly wasted an hour, and when others have
* done so for me, great has been my indignation and pain.'
Again, he says, ' A bi.shop has far more to do than sit in
* his Chapter, and be bowed to, and consecrate priests, pre^ich
^ fimeral sermons for l)ig fees, travel from house to house in
^ pleasant weather, and look out fat places for his own chil-
* dren and grandchildren.' We can well believe him when he
^ tells us, " My greatest difhcidty, as bishop, has been to fill
^ vacancies with able and faithful clergymen. In Sweden it has
' come to be thought that any young man, who has gone through
UOW HE EXERCISED EPISCOPAL PATRONAGE. 27
* the regular imiyersity course, is fit to minister for Grod, and
^ that no bishop dare refuse him. I have suffered much because
* I would not promote to livings, at the desire of noblemen and
* ladies. To such an extent has this been the case, that scarcely
* a vacancy in my diocese has been filled up without drawing
* upon me the enmity of some lady or gentleman, count or
* coimtess, general or colonel, governor and I do not know of
* whom besides, because I would not do them a good turn by
* providing some minion with a place.' When he felt the
claims of candidates so equally balanced that he could not
decide, he drew lots after the manner of the Apostles.
In illustration of the scrupulous way in which he exer-
cised his episcopal patronage, and at the same time, of his tact,
take this anecdote : One day at Court, the Princess Ulrika
Eleonora kindly enquired concerning the welfare of his wife
and children. " I have a daughter here," he said, " and also
" her husband, Jonas Unge. Will you graciously permit
"them to come into your presence?" "Yes, willingly, by
" all means," she replied. " What living has he?" she asked.
"He is my assistant." "Assistant, do you say?" "Yes,
" your Highness, he has the misforune to be my son-in-law,
" for otherwise he should have had a living long ago, for he is
" a learned, travelled and able man." She then asked if no
suitable living in her gift was vacant, and Wanga was named.
" Let him first preach before your Highness, and try his
" quality," interposed Svedberg. This she allowed, and he
got the living at Wanga, and the promise of a better as soon
as a better became vacant.
His tithes he never exacted. What was brought he took
thankfully, but would not go to law with defaulters. Yet he
condemned none of his. brother prelates who saw fit to act
differently ; but sometimes dryly remarked that he had abun-
dantly seen the truth of an old saying, ' There is no end to
* the love of God and the greed of priests.'
' I have never refused or denied any one his right. I have
28 svedbekq's reforming temper.
willingly taken up the cause of the poor and oppressed. No
one, however humble, has stood waiting at my door, but has
been called in at once to my presence and got an answer,
and his case discussed at the next Chapter. For these
purposes the Most High has made us bishops, not to strut
in our dignity, and have people bowing and curtseying to
us ; but to hear and assist every one to the full extent of our
power.'
Svedberg had a reforming temper, which worked towards
ts ends unchecked by apathy, and invigorated by opposition.
The care of the poor occupied much of his thought, and he
strove hard to put down begging by regular and discriminat-
ing charity. He wished to reduce the number of Saints' days,
which he denounced as mere excuses for idleness and drinkmg,
and instead, to keep Sundays as Sabbaths. Public penance
in church on the cutty-stool he ^abhorred — for it makes
^ culprits shameless and hardened, instead of tender and truly
* repentant.'
The purity of the Swedish language was another of his
concerns. It was, he thought, in a state of rapid corruption
firom the crude absorption of French words and phrases, against
which practice he firmly set his face, and published a work on
the subject entitled Shibboleth^ which made much stir and pro-
voked much contradiction. In 1722 he produced a Swedish
granunar, the first, I believe, ever printed, and left in manu-
script ^A complete Swedish Dictionary^ every Swedish word in
* which is extracted from the Holy Swedish Bible and books con'
* temporaneous with tV, and interpreted in Latin ^ and elaborated
* with great care,^
Next to churches, schools held a prominent place in his heart.
To open new ones and extend and improve old ones was his
constant effort. The common methods of teaching, he thought
very bad, and as a step towards better ones, he published * A
* Book of Sentences for Orammar Schools, in which^ in a light and
^Jovial manner J Latin, Greek and some Hebrew tnay be learnt.''
LEABNIN6 DRIVEN IN POSTERIORLY. 29
The merciless use of the rod, which was worked like a flail in
many of the schools, he tried to supersede by prizes. Writing
to the King for money to purchase prizes, having himself given
all he could spare, he says, ^ And now a higher hand is wanted;
^ not such a hand as I had to feel in my youth, when every-
* thing I learnt was driven in posteriorly :' he seems never to
have forgotten his own early school-days under drunken Hl-
Peter's stick.
( 30 )
CHAPTER IV.
EMANUEL ABROAD AND THE BISHOP AT HOME.
Emanuel's education was meanwhile carried on at the Uni-
versity of Upsala. Of his thoughts and actions in these years
of his youth, we can discover nothing. In 1709, at the age of
twenty-one, he took the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
The Latin dissertation which he wrote for this degree he
printed, and dedicated to his father in some words of warm
affection. It consisted of a selection of sentences from Seneca
and Publius Sjtiis Mimus, used as texts for comments of his
own on friendship, filial love and other virtues. At the same
time he published, in a work of his father's, a Latin version
of the twelfth chapter of Ecclesiastes.
It was then resolved that he should go abroad for a few
years, as we learn from the following humble memorial ad-
dressed to the King : —
'Stockholm, 22 May, 1709.
* As I am minded to allow my son Emanuel Svedberg to
* travel in foreign lands for the sake of his studies, which he
* has hitherto diligently pursued at Upsala ; so I make my
* most humble prayer to your Royal Majesty for permission.
*Jesper Svedberg.'
For some reason or other Emanuel did not leave Sweden
until the following year. In a journal he gives this account of
his first eventful voyage : —
* In the year 1710 I set out for Gottenburg, that I might
* be conveyed, by ship thence to London. On the voyage, my
* life was in danger four times : first on some shoals, towards
A PERILOUS VOYAGE. 31
* which we were driven by a storm, until we were within a
^ quarter of a mile from the raging breakers, and we thought
' we should all perish. Afterwards we narrowly escaped some
^ Danish pirates under French colours ; and the next evening
' we were fired into from a British ship, which mistook us for
' the same pirates, but without much damage. Lastly, in Lon-
' don itself, I was exposed to a more serious danger. WTiile we
' were entering the harbour, some of our countrymen came to
^ us in a boat, and persuaded me to go with them into the city.
^ Now it was known in London that an epidemic was raging
'm Sweden; therefore all who arrived from Sweden were
'foribidden to leave their ships for six weeks, or forty days; so
' I, having transgressed this law, was very near being hanged,
'and was only freed under the condition, that if any one
'attempted the same thing again, he shoidd not escape the
'gallows.'
In London and Oxford he spent more than a year seeing
every sight and man of note he could. In 1710 London was
a city of 500,000 inhabitants, about equal to the Manchester
OP Glasgow of to-day. In that year St. Paul's Cathedral was
completed, after being thirty-five years in building; and we
can fancy young Svedberg wandering in its aisles, and meeting
Wren, and perhaps uttering a few words of admiration in
timid English. Addison and Steele were in those days busy
with their ^ Spectator ^^ and he may have taken lessons in
English out of its pages damp from the press. Swift was
writing his weekly ^Eoeaminer* and serving his new ftiends, the
Tories, against his old ones, the Whigs. Defoe was, also
busy with politics arguing for the Hanoverian succession, and
getting shut up in his prison for his pains. Pope was amazing
the town with his ^ Pastorals^ his ^ Essay on Criticism^ and his
' Bape of the Lock^ He was of the same age as Svedberg,
and when he will again visit London in 1745, bom anew and
ready for a second life, Pope's fistful life on earth will have
been nm« Dr. Isaac Watts, in 1710, was preaching to large
32 LONDON AND ITS SIGHTS IN 1710.
audiences in an Independent Chapel in Mark Lane. Sache-
verell, whose scurrilous mouth had been closed by the House
of Lords^ he could not have heard; but he might see his
sermons burnt by the hangman in front of the Exchange, and
the London mob testifying their admiration for the Church
and Sacheverell in riot, drink and bonfires. Another sight,
curious and memorable, he may have witnessed. Anne was
Queen ; and from Lichfield to London, a weary journey of
one hundred and nineteen miles, came Mrs. Johnson with her
son Samuel, a heavy child, thirty months old, sorely afflicted
with the king's evil, to be touched by Anne for his cure. Years
after the Doctor used to say he ' had a confused, but somewhat
^ solenm recollection of the Queen, as a lady in diamonds and
Mong black hood.' In the same year Handel came to London,
a young man, and commenced his melodious English career.
Literatiu^ had not for Emanuel the same charm as science.
Mathematics, astronomy, and mechanics were his chosen stu-
dies, and he eagerly sought the acquaintance of men, who were
masters in them. Models of machinery, and copies of scientific
works he drained his purse to purchase, and sent them home
to Sweden.
He visited John Flamsteed, at the Greenwich Observa-
tory. The Royal Society in 1710 moved from Gresham
College to a house in Crane Court, oflF Fleet Street, * in the
^ middle of the town, and out of noise,' and there he would see
Sir Isaac Newton, sitting president, in his seventieth year vrith
Sir Hans Sloaue as secretary, and surrounded by the savans of
the time. In his visit to Oxford he met Edmund Halley, * a
* man second only to Newton,' who was striving to discover a
method of finding the longitude by the moon : a problem
Emanuel himself will struggle with from time to time far
into his old age.
Leaving England, in 1711, he sailed for Holland. At
Utrecht he abode, while the Congress of Ambassadors fi>om all
the European Courts assembled to consummate that peace
syedberg's palace burned. 33
which gave Spain to the Bourbons, and nullified Marlborough's
victories. Through Brussels and Valenciennes he went to
Paris, and in Paris and Versailles lived a year. Here he
would see Louis XIV. taken to piety in the last years of his
long life ^widi his Missal and his Maintenon, looking back
* with just horror on Europe, four times set ablaze for the sake
* of one poor mortal in big perriwig, to no purpose. ' In Paris he
made the acquaintance of Pierre Varignon, a laborious student
and mathematician, and at his house met the pleasantFontenelle,
the man of taste and wide general knowledge of science and
literature. Voltaire, too he may have encountered, then a
youth of twenty, and already known for his incisive tongue.
Massillon, in the height of his glory, he would hear preach.
From Paris he went by coach to Hamburg, and thence to
Pomerania, a German province on the Baltic, then subject to
Sweden, a conquest of Gustavus Adolphus. There in the
little sea-side university town of Griefsvalde he took up his
abode, waiting until his father should find for him some work
in Sweden, — ^alternating mathematics witli poetry in my
^ studies,' as he states in one of his letters.
His fadier, meanwhile, was in the midst of trouble. Through
life Svedberg suffered severely from fires, which are frequent
in Sweden, owing to many of the houses being built of wood,
which in winter is heated and dried with stoves to a high
pitch of inflammability. In 1710, the city of Skara was burnt
down, and die cathedral much injured. Now in 1712 his
own house at Brunsbo is consumed, and all his furniture and
writings perish. In a letter to the Princess Ulrika Eleonora, he
deplores his ' sins which have moved God to such wrath,' but
thanks Him because, he says, ^ He yet maintains my courage.'
He continues — ^ The fire broke out in my study, which was all
* ablaze when we got to it, with my library and manuscripts ;
* but strange to say' The Garden of Paradise^ by J. Amdt,* and
* John Amdt, a Lutheran divine, born 1555, died 1621. His workn were
once widely read- and esteemed.
D
34 THE FIRE AT BRUN8B0.
^ my own ^ CcUechisnC were found in the ashes with only their
^ covers singed. From this I conclude, that God does not disown
^jnj trifling labours, and I am encouraged to persevere in the
^ use of those powers, which God has given me. Would that He
^ had only allowed me to keep my little hand Bible, which I had
^ carried for 44 years, and which I valued more than a hundred
^ other volumes r He says he feels much relieved in writing to
her Highness about his mishap, and concludes — ^ I had pre-
^ pared a treatise on the Lion of the North, based on a dream
^ which Councillor Schmalcalden had in 1526, when he saw in
^ vision, all that has happened to our gracious King, and which
* promises good to aU Christendom, and the conversion of aU
^ Turks, Jews and Pagans. K God give me Ufe and grace, I
^ shall Mt down again and write about this vision.'
Not only his ' Catechiam^ and Amdt's ' Garden of Paradise^
escaped the fire, but in the preface to the ^ diiechisni he says —
^ There was also found among the ashes my portrait on a
' copper-plate uninjured, though somewhat darkened by smoke ;
^ yet, in a room close by, a copper kettle, full of water, was
* melted.'
Special subscriptions were commanded for the rebuilding
of Brunsbo, but all was not done that Svcdberg required. We
therefore find him addressing the following characteristic letter
to the Government, in the name of Charles XII., who was then
an exile in Turkey —
*Ranaker, 11th March, 1712.
*Mo8t Mighty King, Most Gracious Lord, — My dispo-
^ sition, thank God, has ever been far from selfish, and for this
^ cause God has most richly blest me. By His help, I have
^been able, without assistance from others, to spend large
^ sums in printing expensive books for the service of God^s
^ Church, and the edification of many souls. Were I now to
^ continue this expenditure, when misfortune and misery cry
^ aloud, and all bear sympathy with me, and desire my rescue,
^ and were I to keep resolute silence I should give myself up
WAIUNQ LETTER TO THE KING. 35
to deq)air| and yield my people to wretchedness. To do so
would neither be pleasing to God, nor agreeable to a father^s
heart ; I am therefore bound to complain, and bring my
necessities before those, who are placed by a merciful Grod in
such positions, that by virtue of their office, they are bound
to succour those who are in distress, and who cannot there-
fore allow me or mine to go to ruin.
^ Your Royal Highness gives proof of your sovereign grace
and tenderness in ordering special subscriptions to be made
for the complete restoration of the episcopal palace ; but I,
my wife and children, oh! most gracious King, are going
about little short of naked ; neither have I a single book,
which my office demands.
^ When the house is ready, there will be fixtures to be
thought of: chests, cupboards, tables, table-doths, beds, bed-
linen, bed-curtains, dishes, plates and various other things,
required in such an establishment.
* I have, O King, two young sons, who have been brought
up for your Majesty's service. One of twenty-four years
of age is now in England pursuing his studies, another of
seventeen is in Pomerania with the army. I must not see
them want.
^ I have, as said, spent large sums in my country's service
in writing and printing many books, and many of them have
been lost in the fire. The second volume of my sermons,
the printing of which was nearly complete, is burned to the
extent of thirty sheets, but as the larger part b saved, these
thirty sheets will have to be printed over again.
^Jesper Svedberg.'
The palace was rebuilt the same year in stone, and much
more magnificently. Over the door he inscribed, ' Therefore
* now let it please Thee to bless the house of Thy servant, that
' it may continue for ever before Thee ; for Thou, O Lord God,
* hast spoken it, and witli Thy blessing let the house of Thy
' servant be blessed for ever.' 2 Samuel vii. 29.
D 2
36 HOW THE PALACE WAS BURNED.
About the origin of this fire he giy€» a strange story —
One summer day when coming out of Asaka Church, I saw
a crowd in the comer of the church-yard. When we got home
I asked my man what was the matter. ^^ O/' said he, ^^ it was
^^ a man possessed witli the Devil, and when he saw you coming
" out of church he cried, * You grey-headed old fellow with the
" short hair, you took a steak out of me, but I'll serve you out
" yet !' " Ifound out afterwards, that he had kept company with
the female sinner, that I had brought to repentance at Brunsbo
before her execution, and that he came along with her on that
occasion, but was unable to approach any nearer my house
than the gate. When she came out from me, he had no more
power over her, and from that hour he cursed and hated me.
His revenge was probably gratified inGod granting him power,
as in the case of Job, to destroy Brunsbo by fire in February,
1712, with all my property. The fire broke out at midnight
in my study, in the very place where the woman sinner was
converted : but he did not gain much thereby. God granted
unto me, as unto Job, twice as much as before, and a far
handsomer and more convenient mansion.'
As time went on, he began to grow anxious concerning
EmanueFs settlement in life, and again he applies to the King.
* Brunsbo, 21 October, 1714.
* Most Mighty King, Most Gracious Lord, — ... I also
' have a son, Emanuel Svedberg, who, after having graduated
^ at Upsala, has been for four years pursuing his studies in
^ England, Holland, and France, and is now staying, I believe,
^ at Rostock, or Griefsvalde. In mathematics and mechanics
* he may, with God's help, be useful to your Majesty, either
* at the Academy, or elsewhere.
* For the rest, I will most humbly assure you, that by the
* grace of God, I shall so do my duty in proposing people for
*• appointments, that you shall have no reason to regret your
^ gracious assent.
' Jesper Svedber«.'
A PLACE WANTED FOR EMANUEL. 37
Apparently no answer was given to this ; for within five
weeks after he repeats his request.
*Brunsbo, 25 November, 1714.
* Most Mighty and Gracious King, — In my last humble
^ memorial I mentioned, that I have a son, Emanuel, who has
^ been for four years abroad in England, Holland and France,
^ and is now living at Griefsvalde. He has made good use of
^ his time, is master of the requisite languages, and is expert
^ in madiematics and mechanics. If your Royal Majesty has
^ need of such a one, I assure you he will give you satisfaction.
*Jespee Svedbebq.'
Of Emanuel at Griefsvalde we learn some things from a
letter, undated, addressed by him to Eric Benzellus, who had
married his eldest sister, Anna.
* Honoured and Dear Brother, — It is some time since I
had the pleasure of writing to you. I do not suppose my
silence has given rise to any anxiety ; as it was caused partly
by negligence, and partly because I have not had any op-
portunities of writing. The same reasons have likewise
prevented me from giving my dear parents any news about
myself. ...
* Towards the end of my stay in Paris, I went to see
everything in it, that could be seen. I also took my com-
panions to those friends, to whom you so kindly introduced
me, and they shewed us every politeness for your sake, as
they retain an incredible esteem and affection for you. As
soon as Fadier Quien heard your name, he placed the whole
of his library at our service, and was at a loss to know how
to show us sufficient attention. The same was the case with
Father Le Long, who has a History of Literature on hand.
It would be to diem a heart-felt delight to have you amongst
them.
* I am very glad, Aat I have come to a place where I have
leisure to arrange my works and ideas, which until now have
been in disorder, and scattered here and there on scraps
38 A LIST OF INVENTIONS.
of paper. I have now begun this labour, and shall soon
complete it. I have promised my dear father to publish a
^Specimen Academicam^^ for which I shall select some inven-
tions I have in mechanics. Moreover, I have die following
mechanical contrivances.
^ 1. The construction of a sort of ship, in which a man can
go below the surface of the sea, and do great damage to the
fleet of an enemy.
^ 2. A new form of syphon, by which a large quantity of
water may be raised from any river to more lofty situations
in a short time.
^ 3. On lifting weights by water, by means of this syj^on,
with greater ease than by the mechanical powers.
^ 4. On constructing sluices in places, where there is no fall
of water, by means of which large ships, with their cargoes,
may be raised to any height within an hour or two.
^ 5. A machine, driven by fire, for pumping water, and
lifting at forges, where the water has no fall.
^ 6. A bridge, which can be opened and shut.
^ 7. New machines for condensing and exhausting air by
means of water. Also a new pump, acting by water and
mercury, without any syphon, and which has many advan-
tages over the common kind.
^ 8. A new construction of air-guns, by which a thousand
balls may be discharged through one tube, in one moment.
^ 9. A universal musical instrument, by means of which the
most inexperienced musician can execute all the kinds of mo-
dulations, which are found in notation.
* 10. Sckiographia untversalisj or a mechanical method of
delineating houses of every kind, and on any surface, by means
of fire.
'11. An aquatic clock, in which water replaces the index,
and by its course shows the motion of the planets, and produces
other curious effects.
'12. Likewise, a mechanical chariot containing all kind*
EMANUEL TO BENZEL1U8. 39
of tools, which are set in action by the movement of the
horses.
^ A flying chariot, or the possibility of floating in the air and
moving through it.
^ 13. A method of discovering the desires and afiections of
the minds of men by analysis.
^ 14. And on new methods of making chords and their
properties.
^ These are my mechanical inventions, which were scattered
among my papers, but now they are set in order, so that when
a chance occurs, diey may be published. I have likewise
ftimished the whole of them with algebraic and numeral cal-
culations, whence I have deduced the proportions, motion,
times, and all the properties, which they ought to possess.
Moreover, I have some papers on the analytical sciences,
and astronomy, which require their own place and time.
O, how greatly I desire, my dearest brother, to submit all Ihese
matters to your mspection, and to lay them before Professor
Elfvius, but as I cannot show you the actual machines, I will
at least send you the drawings of them, on which I am occupied
daily.
^ A person has called on me to collect my poems in a volume.
They are merely fables, similar to those of Ovid, under cover
of which I have concealed all the events which have taken
place in Europe during the last fourteen or fifteen years, so
that I have been able to sport freely with grave affairs, and
play with the heroes and great men of our country. In die
meantime, however, I feel some shame in speaking of so many
plans whilst as yet I have done nothing. The cause is my
travels and their hindrances.
^ I have a great desire to return to Sweden, and take in
hand all Folhem's inventions for the purpose of delineating
and describing them, and confirming them by physics, me-
chanics, hydrostatics and hydraulics, as well as by the
algebraic calculus : and by this means commence a Swedish
40 EMANUEL AT URIEF8VALDE.
^ Hocietj for the pursuit of the Mathematical Sdences, for
* which we have an excellent foundation in Polhem's inventions.
^ I wish also that mine could serve the same end.
* As to my theory concerning the Method of Finding the
^ Longitude, it too is on scraps of paper. I was able to give
* only a few hints concerning it in Paris, where our friends
^ wished to see it, and to know how it could be practised ; but
^ I did not wish them to know all, and so lose any reward I
* might obtain by my invention. . . .
^ Your most affectionate,
^ Emanuel Svedberg.
^ P.8. A thousand remembrances to my sister Anna. I
^ hope she is not alarmed at the approach of the Russians. I
f have a great longing to see my little brother Eric again (his
^ nephew), perhaps he will be able to make a triangle, or to
* draw for me when I give him a Uttle ruler. Vale.'
In another letter to Benzelius, repeating his desire for the
formation of a mathematical society, and sending him * a plan
* for an air pump worked by water,' he writes —
* Griefsvalde, 4 April, 1715.
* I am relieving these mathematical studies with poetry. I
*• have published one or two pieces, and I have in the press
* some fables, like those of Ovid, under which the deeds of
* some kings and great people are hidden.
' As to literary ability, nothing worthy of much notice is
* to be found in Griefsvalde, which is, excuse the expression^
' a very paltry academy. Papke is the professor of mathe-
^ matics, and is better fitted for anything than that science.
' I should have liked to meet Leibnitz, who is at pre-
' sent in Vienna. Wolfs ' Cursus MatJieTnattctis^^ translated into
' Latin, should be in Sweden ; it is a very useful and clearly-
' written book.
' 1 am exceedingly glad to hear that Professor Upmark
* and sister Eva Svede, are united in thalamo et lecto. I
* wish them every joy. I had intended to write a carmen
KINQ CHARLES ESCAPES FROM TURKEY. 41
* nupHale over them ; but as it is now too late, it must be a
^ cctrmen geniale,
^ Salute sister Anna a thousand times, and if you write, I
^ shall expect a short account of my little brother Eric/
His small volume of Latin prose fables he published at
Griefsvalde, in 1715, entitled ^Camena Borea^ cum heroum et
^ heraidum factis ludens^ sive FahdUe Ovidianis similes.^ Also
an oration, fervent with patriotism, on the return of Charles
XII. from Turkey, under the following circumstances.
Charles had invaded Russia, and like Napoleon a century
later, found its deserts and climate worse foes than armies. He
laid siege to Pultowa, where the Russians had collected large
stores, and Peter the Great advanced to its relief with 70,000
men. On the 8th of July, 1709, Charles and Peter fought
a battle before Pultowa, which ended in the complete defeat
of the Swedes. Charles fled to Turkey, and placed himself
under the protection of Sultan Achmet III., who generously
assigned him a pension and the town of Bender, on the
Dneister, as a residence.
In this weary exile *the Lion of the North' spent five
years. His army, with which he had done deeds which
justly filled the world with amazement, was annihilated by
famine, slaughter and captivity. Few of his soldiers ever
returned to Sweden. His continental provinces were absorbed
into the dominions of his enemies, and his country left without
commerce, money, or credit. Shut up in Bender, many of his
subjects, whose prudence was more than their loyalty, were
not unwilling, that he should be kept there perpetually, and
out of the way of mischief.
But Charles ^ ended this obstinate torpor at last ; broke
* out of Turkish Bender, or Demotica. With a groom or two,
^ through desolate steppes imd mountain wildernesses, through
* crowded dangerous cities he rode without pause, forward,
^ ever forward in darkest incognito, the indefatigable man ; —
* and finally on Old Hallowmas Eve (22nd— 11th November,
42 EMANUEL RETURNS HOME.
^ 1714), £ELr in the night, a horseman, with two others still
*' following him, travel splashed, and white with snow, drew
^ bridle at the gate of Stralsund ; and to the surprise of the
^ Swedish sentinel there, demanded instant admission to the
* Governor. The Governor, at first a little surly of humour,
^ saw gradually how it was ; sprang out of bed, and embraced
^ the knees of the snowy man ; Stralsund in general sprang
^ out of bed, and illuminated itself, that same Hallow-Eye : —
^ and in brief, Charles XII., after five years of eclipse, has
* re-appeared upon the stage of things ; and menaces the
* world, in his old fashion, from that City.**
Stralsund was the only place in Pomerania left to die
Swedes by their enemies. Well fortified, almost surrounded
by lake and sea, it was supposed inaccessible, and well suited
for a centre of aggression. Here Charles found a Swedish
garrison of 9,000 men, and he instantly commenced opera-
tions against Prussia, Denmark, Saxony and Russia, in die
hope of retrieving his disasters; but after obtaining a few
advantages, his foes closed him up in Stralsund, and beaded
him by sea and land. Griefsvalde was only fifteen miles trom
Stralsund, and as the country grew hot vnth armies, young
Svcdberg deemed it prudent to be off ; he therefore, in the
Spring of 1715, got on board a small vessel, crossed the
Baltic, and reached home safely.
Svcdberg was glad to see his son again ; but was troubled
that he should now be twenty-seven, and yet have nothing
to do. Kuig Charles had a world in arms against him at
Stralsund ; yet he might spare a thought for ^my son Emanuel.'
He thinks there can bo no harm in trying, and to Lord Lieu-
tenant Pfiff, who is with Charles in his German fortress, he
addresses a letter, in which occurs this passage —
*Bnmsbo, 12 July, 1715.
* May it please your Excellency, — My son Emanuel, after
» Carlyle's 'Frederick the Oreat,* vol. i. page 426.
PLAGE AND NOBILITY WANTED EARNESTLY. 43
^ fiye ^ears^ foreign trayel, has at length returned home. I
^ hope he may be found available for some Academy. He is
^ accomplished in Oriental languages, as well as European,
' but espedallj he is an adept in poetry and mathematics.
^ He intends to build himself an Observatory on Kinnakulla,
^ which is not far from Skara, where he will try to find out a
^ method for ascertaining the longitude at sea. For some
' means, by which this may be done, many potentates have
' offered large sums of money to the discoverer. K there
^ should be an opening at an Academy here in Sweden, will
* your Excellency be so kind as advance him to fill it? With
^ God's help, he will honour his place.
*Jespeb Svedberg.'
The Bishop, in the Spring of the same year, had addressed
another request to the King, praying that his sons, and two
of his sons-in-law, in one body, might be ennobled. Here is
his petition —
* Brunsbo, 9 February, 1715.
^ Most Mighty King, Most Gracious Lord, — It has pleased
^ God to allot me seven children, for whose well-being I am
* bound to care. Of these, three are sons, — ^the eldest seeks to
*' render himself completely accomplished for the service of
* your royal Majesty and our fatherland, by courses of study, —
^ the second (Eliezer) does so likewise in business connected
* with mining, and the third (Jesper) also, by service for two
* years in your Majesty's army in Fomerania, but now by a
^ voyage to the far Indies, or as it is called. New Sweden.
^ The daughters have all entered into matrimony with honour-
^ able persons ; two are married to men in the priestly estate,
^one (Anna) to the Librarian of your Majesty's Academy
^ in Upsala, Eric Benzelius,* and the other (Catherina) to a
^ pastor, here in West Gothland, Jonas Unge : of the other
*• two, one (Margaretta) is married to Lundstedt, the Master
* Afterwards Archbinhop of Upsala.
44 SYEDBERG WOULD HAVE HIS SONS NOBLES.
' of the Horse in your Majesty^s Life Guards, and the other
^ (Hedwig) to Lars Benzelstiema, the Master of the Mines in
* East and West Bergslagen.
^ For these I make bold in all humility to solicit, that it
' may please your royal Majesty to grant me the favour, that
* others of my brothers in office have experienced : namely, to
^promote to the rank and place of nobles my afore-named
^ sons and my two last-named sons-in-law, the Master of the
^ Horse, Lundstedt and the Master of the Mines, Benzelstiema.
^ It will be an encouragement to them still further, in humble
* submission, to make themselves worthy of the grace of your
' royal Majesty and the service of their country, and to me,
* your Majesty's loyal subject, your favour will be peculiarly
^ agreeable.
'Jesper Svedbero.'
Nothing at the time came of these petitions, but Svedberg
was not discouraged. He will renew them, and have them
answered.
Li the course of other matter we find him writing — * I
^ have kept my sons to that profession to which Grod has given
^ them inclination and liking. I have not brought up one to
^the clerical office, although many parents do this incon-
^ siderately, and in a manner not justifiable, by which the
^ Christian Church and Priesthood suffer not a little, and are
* brought into contempt.'
Emanuel meanwhile collected the poems he had written
during his travels, and published them at Skara in a volume
entitled ^ Ludua Heliconius sive Carmina Miscellanea^qwB varita
^ in locis cecintt Etnanuel Svedberg.'* Like most Latin verses,
written by modems, little more can be s^d of them than that
they are proofs of their author's facile command of a dead lan-
guage. The poems are chiefly praises of love, sometimes erotic,
of friendship and of patriotism. One of the poems, and the best
in the collection, has been translated by Mr. Francis Barham,
of Bath. It commemorates a victory gained by peasants, led
EMANUEL'S LATIN VERSES. 45
on by Steinbock, over a Danish army, which had made a descent
on the Swedish coast during Charles's exile in Turkey. He
thus addresses the absent King : —
' Ah, soon retiini,^-oh, monarch of our love !
' Oh, Sun of Sweden, waste not all thy light
' To illume the crescent of the Ottomans :
' Thine absence we bewail, wandering in glooms
' Of midnight sorrow— save that these bright stars,
* That lead us on to victory, still console
' Thy people's hearts, and bid them not despair.'
And thus Steinbock : —
' Steinbock I thy red right hand
' Hath smitten down the spoiler ; and in thee
' Another Charles we honour, — and rejoice
* To hail thee, hero of thy grateful country.
' Chief of our gallant chiefs —
' Too gallant for a song so weak as mine —
* Oh ! could their names enshrined in monuments
' Appear, how would the eyes of Sweden kindle
' To read them. Coronets of gold for thee,
' Were all too little recompence ; hereafter,
* A crown of stars is all thine own. The foe
' Lies broken by thy force and heroism ;
' Numerous as Denmark's sands they came — how few
* Returned — ^their princes and their soldiery
' Repulsed with scorn, while shuddering horror hung
* Upon their flight.*
And so forth. He never writes nonsense, or rises above fair
conmion-placo. If it be admitted that he had some poetic feeling,
it must be confessed that he was wholly wanting in the power
of its expression by those terse and graphic phrases in which
alone poetic thought becomes poetry.
EmanuePs chief friend and correspondent was his brother-
in-law Eric Benzelius. With him he discussed all the me-
chanical and scientific projects with which his mind was teeming.
A Swedish Mathematical Society, with a professor of mechanics,
a secretaiy and other officers, was one of his schemes. Another
was an observatory, where he might work out a method of find-
ing the longitude at sea, and win some of the rewards promised
to any discoverer. The English Parliament in 1 704 had offered
£10,000, £15,000 and £20,000 respectively, for a ready method
46 EMANUEL'S DISCOVERIES AND PROJECTS.
by which the longitude could be determined within sixty, forty
and thirty miles. He also worked hard in commencing the
manufacture of salt in Sweden, and thought, that ^ it would be
* of more importance to the country than the whole of its iron
* trade, and that the money sent out of Sweden for salt would
' be kept at home.' In Westergyllen he spied some white clay,
which he writes to Benzelius, ' I suspect is the same as is used in
^ Holland and England for making tobacco pipes and crockery,'
and prays ' to be informed by Dr. Bromell, or Dr. Boberg,
^ What kind of clay the English and Dutch use, and how they
^ bake tobacco pipes in the sun and oven ? K the clay I have
^ found is of the right kind it will be worth many thousand rix
^ dollars : but silence about it.'
At the end of 1715 Stralsund was taken, and on the 20th
of December, King Charles escaped in a small bark with oars
and sails, amidst the fire of guns, which killed two men by his
side, and shattered the boat's mast. Picked up by a Swedish
vessel he was landed in his own country, and at once began
to make fresh efforts for the prosecution of war.
( 47 )
CHAPTER V.
CHARLES Xn. AND SWEDENBORG.
In 1716, Emanuel started a periodical work, in Swedish, en-
titled * Daedalus Hyperhoreus^ a record of the new flights of
mechanical and mathematical genius in Sweden. It did not
pay; it appeared irregularly, and ceased altogether in 1718,
having only reached a sixth nmnber. Yet it was useful to its
editor, for it advertised his powers, and introduced him to men
of kindred tastes, and especially to Christopher Polhem, an
engineer, who has been called the Scandinavian Archimedes.
Again we find Bishop Svedberg pleading, that his sons be
ennobled.
* Wennesborg, 23 April, 1716.
' Most Mighty King, Most Gracious Lord, — I am desirous
* to help my children forward as far as I can in your royal
* Majesty's service. My son Emanuel is of Polhem's mind,
' and has travelled in foreign parts for four years, and has
* given proofs of his powers in print (see the ^Dcedalus Hyper^
* * Jar€t«'), which are in the Crown Prince's hands. My next
' son, EUezer, is engaged in mining, and my third, Jesper,
* is a sailor, and is now in the Indies. My son-in-law,
^ Lars Benzelstiema, is a master of the mines, and Andreas
^ Lundstedt, another, is Master of the Horse in your Majesty's
* Life Guards. These, I beseech most humbly, that your
* royal Majesty may, of your grace, be pleased to exalt to the
* rank and privilege of Nobles, whereby they will be greatly
* encouraged in your Majesty's service.
'Jesper Svedberg.'
48 EMANUEL MADE ASSESSOR OF MINES.
Towards the close of 1716, Polhem invited Emanuel to
go with him to Lund and see King Charles, who never went
near Stockholm from the day he left it in 1700, not caring to
enter his capital otherwise than a victor. Charles received
him kindly, perceived his abiUties, and gave him the choice of
three places : that of Assessor in the College of Mines was
selected. The warrant ran as follows —
*Lund, 19 December, 1716.
* Charles, &c., to the College of Mines, &c. — In our plea-
sure we have thought fit to appoint Emanuel Svedberg as
Extraordinary Assessor in the College of Mines, in order
that he may co-operate with Polhem, the Councillor of Com-
merce, in his affairs and inventions. It is our pleasure hereby
to let you know the same, with our gracious order, that you
allow him to enjoy a seat and voice in the College whenever
he is able to be present, and especially when any business
connected with mechanics is under discussion.
* With God's blessing, * Carolus.'
The intercouse between Charles XII. and Emanuel became
very intimate, and happily he has left us some accoimt of it* —
* Gommanicated by Svredenborg to M. Nordberg as/ worthy of trans*
* mission to posterity/ and printed by him in his ^HUtoryof Charles XII? A
German version of Nordberg's History in two sumptuous folios, published at
Hamburg in 1742-46, is the only copy of the work I have been able to find
in the British Museum. (1861). Swedenborg mentions to Noidberg 'I hare
' already touched upon this subject in the fourth part of my 'JfisoeOonaa,'
' whence M. Wolf has obtained what he has said in his ' Elemtnta Maike»eo$
* ' Univtrsa,** relative to this new calculus.* In the ' Oenileman*9 Magagine^
for September, 1754, is printed an aocomit of Swcdenborg's interoourse with
Charles XII., with several trifling variations {torn the above, and without
any information as to its derivation, and just as if it were a contribution
from Swedenborg himself. At the end the editor writes — * We should esteem
' it a great favour if this ingenious gentleman would communicate a copy of
' his Swedish Miycsty's scheme for some future Magazine.' That Swedenborg
ever saw the ' Qentltman'i Magazine* is doubtful, but at any rate he does not
appear to have complied with the editor's request
* Christ. Wolfs 'EUmtnta Mathtwoe Uhivencr,' Tom. 1, p. 21, GenevK,
1743. The passage is as follows: ' £t Carohis XII., Kcx Succiic, calculum
' Sexagcnarium cxcogitavit, referentc Emanuele Sweden liorgio, novis chavac-
* teribus et numeris, novisqnc denomiiiatitmibus adinvcntis.'
KING CHARLES AS A MATHEMATICIAN. 49
* In 1716, when M. Polliem received the King's orders to
^repair to Lund, he engaged me to go with him. Having
' been presented to his Majesty, he often did us the honour of
^ conversing with us on the different branches of mathematics,
^ and particularly on mechanics, the mode of calculating forces
^ and other problems in mixed mathematics. He seemed to
^ take great pleasure in these conversations and often put
^questions, as if he wished some easy information, but we
^ soon found he knew more than we had thought, which put
* us on our guard when advancing any doubtftd opinion lest
* he should detect its fallacy. The conversation at one time
' turning on analytic and algebraic calculations and the regula
^fcJsiy he desired us to give him a few examples, which we
* did, proposing such as made it necessary, in order to proceed
^ agreeably to rule, to use signs or symbols as well as equa-
* tions ; but the King did not require them, and after a few
^ minutes' reflection, he told us, without any other aid than his
* own superior genius, in what way our examples might be
* solved, which we always found to agree perfectly with our
^ calculations. I confess, that I have never been able to
' understand, how, by mere reasoning, and without the aid
* of algebra, he was able to solve problems of this kind. It
^ seemed, indeed, that the King was not sorry to display before
^ a competent judge like M. Polhem a penetration and a power
^ of reasoning, equal to those of the ablest mathematicians.
* I will now relate to you, as I am peculiarly able to do,
^what arose from this learned amusement. Conversing one
' day about mthmetic, his Majesty observed that the denary
' arithmetic, in universal use, was most probably derived from
^ the original method of counting on the fingers practised by
* illiterate people of old, who when they had run throu^ the
'fingers of both hands, repeated the process over and over
' again, keeping a tally of tens, and when figures were invented
* this mode of numerating by tens was preserved and brought
' down to the present day. The King was of opinion, that
£
50 A NEW ARITHMETIC.
^ had such not been the origin of our mode of counting, a
^ much better method might have been devised ; the number
* 10 being a very inconvenient one, as it can be divided by
^ no numbers except 5 and 2 without breaking into fractions ;
^ besides, as it contains neither the square, nor the cube, nor
* the fourth power of any nmnber, it interposes perpetual
^ difficulties in the way of easy calculation : whereas, had the
^ periodic number been 8 or 16, great facilities would have
* resulted, the first being a cube number, of which the root or
^ prime is 2, and the second a biquadrate number, of which
^ the root or prime is also 2 ; consequently, either of these
^numbers as a basal number would prove highly useful in
' calculating money or measures, as by them the complexity of
'fractions would be, in a great measure, avoided. Having
* represented to him, that this could not be done unless we
' invented new figures, to which also new names must be
' given, as otherwise, great confusion would arise : he desired
' us to produce an example.
* We chose the number 8, which is of the cube 2. We
* also invented new figures, to which we gave new names, and
' worked out the method, applying it to weights and measures
' and cubic calculations. Our essay we presented to the King,
' who was pleased with it ; but he evidently desired something
' more extended and less easy, in order that there might be
* something on which to display liis great penetration. For
* this purpose he made choice of 64, wliich is the prime number
' 2 involved to the sixtli power ; but we objected, that it was far
' too high a niunber ; and consequently, very inconvenient, that
' if we were obliged to reckon up to 64 (inventing new single
* figures from 10 to 63 inclusive) before recommencing (repre-
' senting 64 by the figures 10), and upon reaching 64 times 64
' or 4096, only three figures would have to be used (4096 being
' represented by the figures 100), the difficulties would be such
* that the scheme would be little short of impossible. However,
* the more we urged these and other difficulties, the more was he
THE king's arithmetical ABILITY. ' 51
detennmed to work out this idea, and to prove to us how easily
and quickly it might be done, he said he would do it himself.
To our amazement he sent us next morning the method fully
developed. He had invented 64 new figures, divided into 8
daases, and each class with its own style of symbol. Upon a
closer inspection I found, that these symbols were composed of
the initial and final letters of his own name, in a manner at
once so clear and exact, that when the first 8 numbers were
known, all the rest up to 64 were learnt with ease ; for the
first 8 were so simple and well contrived, that they served as
a key to the remaining sevens, to which they stood as heads.
^ It was to me that the King committed this plan in his
own handwriting (which I still preserve), that I might frame
from it a table shewing the differences between it and the
common mode of reckoning, both as to names and figures.
^ The King had also added to his plan an example in
multiplication, and an example in division : two operations,
in which I had contemplated much difficulty. As it was my
place to perfect the method, I examined it thoroughly, and
tried to make it yet more convenient and easy of application.
My attempts, however, were in vain, and I question whether
the greatest mathematicians would have succeeded.
* What I chiefly admired was the King's ingenuity, shewn
in the invention of the figures and the names, and the ease
with which the signs could be varied ad tnjlniium. I was
also greatly struck with his example in multiplication ; and
when I consider the short time in which he wrought out the
scheme, I cannot but regard him as endowed with faculties
much fkbove those of other men.
^ From this cause I have been led to believe, that in all his
other actions he was guided by a deeper wisdom than ap-
parently belonged to him. Certain it is, that he thought it
beneath him to assume the air of a learned man by affecting
an imposing exterior.
' He said to me one day that " He who has made no pro-
e2
52 PROPOSED MARRIAGE TO EMERENTIA POLHEM.
^ ^^ gress In mathematics does not deserve to be considered
* " a rational man :" a sentiment truly worthy of a King 1
^ Accordingly, he especially patronized mathematicians, and
' had it pleased Providence to allow him to rule Sweden in
^ peace, he would have raised literature and science to higher
* perfection than they have ever attwied, or perhaps ever
^ will attain in Sweden. His example would have stimulated
* his people, who would have striven with noble emulation to
' win the praise of an accomplished prince, always ready to
' bestow on merit its due reward.'
As to the works King Charles set him to do, he writes —
* At the same time several projects of great utility were
^ laid before the King, and he directed me to assist Polhem in
^ their execution. Amongst them was the dock at Carlscrona
* which we blasted out of the granite rock, for laying down
^ the keels of ships ; and as there is no ebb and flow in the
^ Baltic it is one of the most important works in Europe: also,
* the making of sluices between Lake Wener and Gottenburg,
^ in the midst of the rapids and cataracts near TrolhlQta, a
^ work which would have been the admiration of the world if
^ it had been completed: to say nothing of many other equally
* useful projects.'
Charles was so pleased with his two engineers, that to seal
their partnership he advised Polhem to give Emanuel one
of his daughters in marriage. This Polhem was very wiUing
to do, and Emanuel very willing to have done; for living
in Polhem's house, he had become enamoured of his second
daughter, Emerentia, a girl of fourteen. Unhappily, she did
not care for Emanuel, and would not allow herself Ux be be-
trothed. Her father, however, caused a written agreement
to be drawn up, promising her to him at some future day.
The document, as an obedient child, Emerentia signed ; but
her he.art being elsewhere, she took to sighs and sadness.
Her brother, moved by her misery, stole the agreement from
Emanuel's desk, who soon missing it, as he was used to read
THE KING AND BISHOP BVEDBEBO. 53
it often, besought Polhem to replace it with a new one ; but
fully discovering the state of Emerentia's affections, he at
once relinquished her hand, and left her father^s house.
In 1717, Emanuel published at Stockholm a pamphlet
entitled ^ Instruction concerning the Manufacture of Tin Plate
^ at Stfemsundj and its ttseJ*
It would appear from the following letter addressed to
the King, that the Bishop and son had united in a mining
speculation.
* Brunsbo, 2 November, 1717.
^ A humble eospression of gratitudej and petition fir future
^favours,
^ My son, Emanuel Svedberg, for whose advancement to an
^ honourable office I give humblest thanks, has sent in a hum-
^ ble petition that I, together with Madame Maria Christina
' Bonde (wife of the General) have leave and opportunity
* given to establish a copper-mine here, in West Gothland,
^ on the G^neral^s lady^s estate of Fremstad, in the district
* of Skaraborg, and the parish of Vista. The Secretary
* Cederholm has knowledge of the circumstances.
'Jespeb Svedberg.'
In December, 1717, Bishop Svedberg went to Lund to see
Charies XII. He was very kindly received by the King, who
welcomed him with " Well Bishop, you are not changed since
'■ I saw you last, only you have grown very gray." He was
invited to dinner, and observed * that the King ate very quickly,
* mid gulped down water upon everything, though it were ever
^ so fat.' The King had Svedberg's health drunk in tmnblers
of Spanish wine ; whereon his Majesty grew still more gracious,
and Svedberg more out-spoken. On the following Simday he
preached before the King and his courtiers one of his plain
sermons on the desecration of Fast Days, and prayed, that his
Majesty might be delivered from Behoboam's advisers. ^ In
* the evening,' he writes, ' I was taken into the King's
^ own chamber, and there Prince Frederick pleaded, that I
54 BISHOP SVEDBEKG AND THE KINQ.
^ might retain a coachman ; but the King answered not a word.
' Then spoke I boldly of the cruel grievances of the Qergy,
^ and how a Bishop, who may walk abreast of a Qt>vemor, is
^ not allowed a coachman, whilst a Governor drives to Church
^ with a coachman and two tall footmen behind ; whilst I, a
^ Bishop, have to travel, and make visitations without any one
^ to drive or serve : but to this also the King answered not a
^ word.' CSiarles stopped the torrent of complaints by speaking
of the Swedish language, and praising Svedberg's efforts to
restore and preserve its purity. " Do they speak Swedish in
" France ?" asked the King. " No," said Svedberg. " Then,
" why should we speak French ?" he rejoined. He then in-
quired if there were any foreign words in the Swedish Bible,
and Svedberg said there was a few, and took out his pocket
Bible to show them, telling the King that he never entered
the pulpit without that Bible, and always carried it about when
on duty even as a soldier did his sword, and '^ whoever fiads
^^ me without it may knock me down !" Charles some days
afterwards met him and said ^ Show me your Bible." ^^ I have
" not got it," said he. " Then I will knock you down." " But,"
said Svedberg, " I am not now on duty." A pamphlet by one
Hjame he found on the King's table, written against hiB^Shib*
*• boleth\ and ridiculing his enthusiasm for pure Swedish, whidi
worried him very much, and he would have liked to have
it suppressed ; but had to content himself with Charles's ap-
proval and sympathy.
Concerning this we find Emanuel writing to Benzelius —
* Brunsbo, 14 January, 1718.
* My dear father has not yet returned ; he is expected to-day
' or to-morrow, when we shall hear a budget of news. He has
^ been well received by his Majesty, and dined three times at
^ his table, he preached before him on the second Sunday in
' Advent, and conversed with him several times. He also
' preached in Malmo, where the people almost tore the Church
' in simder to hear him. On his return to Lund, he talked with
THE KING AND EMANUEL. 55
^ the King, and received orders to argue his ^ Shibboleth*; many
^ persons opposed it, nevertheless it took place, but the result I
* do not know. The King lent my father his copy of Hjame's
^ slanderous pamphlet. What must we do with this Hjame?
' Is it to be borne, that he should have the impudence to make
^ such a personal attack upon him I K he had supported his
^ case with facts and arguments, all well ; but he only riots in
^ abuse and mere assertions.'
Charles XII., after his escape from Stralsund, left his
Grerman provinces to their fate, and made war on Norway.
In 1716 he advanced as far as Christiana, but was compelled
to retreat and renew his plans. In 1718, he resolved to lay
siege to Frederic^shall, an important Norwegian fortress, and
called EmanuePs engineering skill to his assistance. On car-
riages of his own invention he wheeled *two galleys, five large
^ boats and a sloop,' overiand from Stromstadt to Idorfjol, a
distance of fourteen miles. Under cover of these vessels, the
King was enabled to transport on pontoons heavy artillery
under the walls of FrederickshalL In a letter to Benzelius
at this time, he says —
^ Wennersborg, 14 September, 1718.
* I found his Majesty very gracious to me, more so than I
could expect, which is a good omen for the future. Count
Momir also shewed me all the favour I could possibly desire.
Every day I laid mathematical subjects before his Majesty,
who allowed everything to please him. When the eclipse
took place, I had his Majesty out to see it, and we reasoned
mudi thereupon. Ho again spoke of my ^Dcedalus^^ and re-
marked on my not continuing the work, to which I pleaded
want of money ; this he does not like to hear of, so I hope
to have some assistance shortly. With respect to brother
Esberg (his nephew), I shall endeavour to find him employ-
ment on the sluice works. I wish my little brother (his
nephew Eric) was grown up. I think I am already in a
condition to begin sluice work for myself, and when I have
56 KING CHARLES BEFORE FREDERICKSUALL-
^ my own command, I shall be able to serve both of them.
* My pay on the sluice works at present is only three silver
^ dollars a day ; I hope soon to have more.'
The King wished to take him with him to Frederickshall,
about which he exclaims to Benzelius — ^^Grod be thanked I
^ I have escaped the campaign in Norway, and that very
^ narrowly, nor should I have been so fortunate, had I not
" used some Uttle management/'
CSiarles had worn out his peopk's patience with his firuit-
less and wastefVd wars, and was nearing the very verge of
even their superstitious loyalty. War, in company with him
was no pastime, for in all hardship and danger he was fiwre-
most, and expected those, who formed his staff to imitate him.
In this Norwe^an si^e soldiers dropped dead at their posts,
and the army was nearly frozen to death. But the conduct
of Charles shamed all discontent into silence. He slept in the
open air on a truss of straw or a plank, and fasted, and worked
night and day, as if his body existed outside the common laws
of Nature. All the endurance, the vigour and the daring of
Sparta seemed revived in him.
His last day in this world had however come. On the
night of the 11th of December, 1718, he went out to inspect
the progress of the trenchea Not finding the parallels so far
advanced as he expected, he was mudi displeased. M. Megret,
a French engineer, who conducted the si^e, assured him that
the place would be taken in eight days. ^ We shall see/' he
said, and proceeded in his survey. Stopping at an ai^le of
the entrenchments, he kneeled down, rested his elbow on
the parapet, and there^ with his body exposed to the fire of
the bcai^ed, he remained watclnng his men working in the
trenches by star-light. In this position, he was struck on
the forehead by a cannon-ball, his hand clutched his sword,
and with a deep sigh he fell dead on the parapet. His
attendants rushed forward, lifted his body, and Megret ex-
claimed, " There, the play is over ; let us begone."
DEATH OF CHARLES XII. 57
Thus died Charies XII. in his 37th year, the last of the
Swedish Eliiigs and the most thorough warrior, perhaps, earth
has ever known. Dead to men, we have not done with him ;
ere long we shaU meet him again in thia book.
( 58 )
CHAPTER VL
BUSINESS AND SPECULATIONS OF SWEDENBORG.
Ulrika Eleonora, sister to Charles XII., succeeded to the
throne, but soon after resigned the crown to her husband,
Frederick, Landgrave of Hesse Cassel. Shortly after her
accession, in 1719, she complied with Bishop Svedberg's
pertinacious prayer, and ennobled his sons. On this occasion
EmanuePs surname was altered from Svedberg to Swedenborg.
As is well known, the Swedish Diet, or Parliament consists of
four houses: the nobles, the clergy, the burghers, and the
peasants or landholders, who are not nobles. The house
of nobles is composed of upwards of two thousand heads of
noble families, and it was into this crowd that Emanuel was
elevated, but was thereby created, neither Count, nor Baron,
as some persist in calling him.
Sweden had suffered so cruelly from the despotic rule of
Charles XII., that the Diet resolved to put some effective
checks on the kingly power. To this Bishop Svedberg was
warmly opposed. He thought, that absolute power belonged
to the King by Divine right, and he saw many administrative
advantages in the King's will being supreme : one had only to
gain access to the King and hear his Yea or Nay, instead of
running from office to office, and enduring delay after delay,
when the least matter required attention or execution ; he
therefore vehemently denounced any change, saying in the
Diet, that " No King was read of in Scripture with the limited
*' power, you would give the Queen, and I abhor the ambition
" of men, who aspire to be Kings of Kings." His opposition
was construed into selfishness ; Kings and Queens had proved
KINO FREDEBICK AND 8V£DB£B0. 59
very beneficial to him, and it waa no more than natural that
he should favoor their extreme poorer. More virulent in-
sinuations were made, in reply to which he closed one of his
speeches before the Diet in these words — ^^ I have gathered
^^ my gray hairs in honour, and in honour I shall carry them
^* to the grave. As long as the 17th and 27th Psahns are in
^^ the Psalter, no one, however mighty he may fancy himself,
"can harm a hair of my head. This campaign against me did
" not commence yesterday, or the day before, but thirty years
" ago, and spite of all enmity, I have risen to where I now
^ mt. I know, that my Angel will receive command from Gbd
^ to prepare a crown for me, when the hour of my departure
^ for the Kingdom of Heaven comes. Meantime, here I sit in
" my place of honour, feariess, and full of joy and praise."
The royal power was circumscribed. Although Bishop
Svedberg enjoyed much court favour, he had no high opinion
of Ulrika Eleonora, whom he thought ' a great hjrpocrite,' and
her consort Frederick ' good for little.' With both he used
great freedom. To King Frederick he said one day, ^' Your
" Majesty must not take it ungraciously, if I tell you what
" people say about you." " Not at all. What do they say ?"
" That your Majesty gives away too much money." " That
" may be true ;" said the King, ^^ but they should remember,
^ that if I give away one Swedish ducat, I receive 14,000 ducats
" a year from my own Hesse Cassel — But what more do they
" say ?" " They say your Mi^esty very seldom visits your
^' Council." ^^ Ah, that is true, and not to be wondered at ; for
^^ there I find I have sixteen tutors, every one more impatient
^ than another, to instruct and govern me."
Sometimes he ventured too far in his freedom, and in 1720
he provoked the Queen to write him a sharp letter threatening
him with her displeasure, if he sent her ^ any more of his indecent
^ and uncivil epistles, in disregard of that reverence which was
^ due from a subject.'
The King and Queen visited Bishop Svedberg in the Autumn
60 THE bishop's third makriaqe.
of 1722 at Bnmsbo, and spent some days with him^ filling his
palace with their retinue* ' At their departure/ he writes,
^ they gave me one hundred ducats, a coronation medal of pure
^ gold weighing thirty-nine ducats, and my wife a silver salver
^ and ewer weighing about forty-five ounces, and ten ducats for
* gilding.'
The wife here mentioned was his third. His second, Sara
Bergia, died at Skara on the 3rd of March, 1720, and before
the year was out, on Christmas-day, he married Christina
Arhusia, the daughter of John Arhusius, the Dean of Fahlun.
Concerning this third marriage in his sixty-seventh year he
makes this note —
^ My dear wife, Sara Svedberg, died in the year 1720, to
' my great grief and loss. My circumstances, and my extensive
^ household required a faithful companion, whom God gave me
^ in Christina Arhusia. May God bless us both in the name of
^ Jesus. Amen !'
In 1718 Emanuel issued three pamphlets written in Swedish.
^ 1. Attempts to Jind the Longitude hy means of the
^ Moofiy set forth for the juc^ment of the Learned. l^mJa.^
In a letter to Benzelius he proposes translating this ^ into
^ Latin for foreign circulation, and dedicating it to Edmund
^ Halley, at Oxford, who has likewise done something in the
^ same way.'
* 2. The Art of Bules^ in ten parts. Upsala.'
This was an introduction to Algebra : a continuation of the
treatise, containing the first account given in Sweden of the
differential and integral calculus, was handed about in manu-
script, but never printed.
^ 3. On the Motion and Ihsition of the Earth cmd the
*' Planets: in which are some conclusive proofo^ that the
^ EariKs course decreases in rapidity^ being now slower
^ than heretofore ; makirtg winter nights and summer days
*• longer than they used to be. Skara. Dedicated to Prinoe
« Frederick, 10 December, 1718.'
PAMPHLETS AND SPECULATIONS. 61
In 1719 he published other three.
* 1. Onthe Levelofihe Sea and the great Tides of the
^ Ancient Warld^ from Proofo in Sweden. Upsala. Dedi-
* cated to Queen Ulrika Eleonora on her coronation day,'*
* 2. Information about Docks^ Sluices and Salt
* Works, Stockholm,^
* 3. A Proposal for the Division of Money and
* Measures^ so as to fxcilitate Calculation^ and avoid
* Fractions, Stockholm.^
Benzelius advised him to relinquish his last scheme for
a new system of money and measures as impracticable, to
which, in a letter, he replies —
^ It is a little discouraging to be dissuaded thus. For
* myself, I desire all possible novelties, aye, a novelty for
* every day in the year, provided the world will be pleased
* with them. In every age there is an abundance of persons,
^ who follow the beaten tract, and remain in the old way; but
^ perhaps there are only from six to ten in a century, who
^ bring forward new things, founded in argument and reason.'
In another letter he answers Benzelius, who advances the
notion, that the Sun is the abode of the damned —
* Stockholm, 26 November, 1719.
^ I think exactly the opposite. It ought rather to be the
* abode of the blest. The foUowing are my reasons—
^ 1. The Sun is the centre of our planetary system, and
^ the motion and subsistence of everything in the solar vortex
^ has its source from the Sun. — 2. The firmament and heaven
^ of the Planets are towards the Sun — upwards in the solar
Wortex is towards the Sun, downwards is away from the
^ Sun, towards the end of the solar vortex, or the Tartarian
^ regions. — 3. Light and splendour are in the Sun, and dark-
^ ness and its horrors are where the Sun is far off and dim. —
^ 4. But the main reason appears to be, that the most exceed-
^ ingly subtle aura, and the minimal element exist in the Sun.
^ The nearer the Sun, the finer are the elements. In the Sun
62 IS HELL IN THE SUN?
itself their fineness is probably so great, that the partieles are
almost devoid of composition, and put off the name of Matter,
as well as form, weight and many other qualities, which com-
pound particles possess ; it would therefore seem likely, that
in the Sun — ^the finest sphere — ^would be the finest being — a
God, an Angel — a something, which as it is not material,
must be most eminent. Like seeks like, and the finer does
not unite with grosser. For these reasons, I rather incline
to believe, (though I willingly leave the point to your judg-
ment) that God has His seat in the Sun, as the Bible says.
^ It would be absiurd to imagine, that the Sun^s heat is used
to tonnent the bodies of the damned. In the nature of
things, there is no pain without destruction. When fire bums
our flesh, it dissolves and destroys the flesh; and with its
destruction ends the possibility of sensation, and therefore,
of pain.
^ I hope no evil sense may be put upon these reasonings
of mine. The Word of God is the only foundation for
philosophy.'
In these words we see the germs of some thoughts, which
he afterwards developed in volumes.
At this time he was neither happy in his home, nor satisfied
with his work, or prospects in life. To Benzelius he writes —
' Among all my relations I know of no one, who has wished
^ me, and still wishes me, so well as yourself. If I can in any
^ way shew my gratitude, it shall not be wanting. Brother
^ (in-law) Unge likes nobody ; at least, he has estranged my
^ dear father and mother's affections from me now for four
* years. However, it will not benefit himself.'
He feels he is not appreciated —
' Stockholm, 1 December, 1719.
* Should I be able to collect the necessary means, I have
^ made up my mind to go abroad, and seek my fortune in
^ mining. He must indeed be a fool, who is loose and
' irresolute, who sees his place abroad, yet remains in obscurity,
MELANCHOLY, FOR HE IS OUT OP PLACE. 63
^ and wretchedness at home, where the furies, Envy and
^ Pluto, have taken up their abode, and dispose of all rewards,
^ where all the trouble I have taken is awarded with such
' shabbiness I
* Before my time of departure arrives, I only desire quiet-
* ness, and perhaps I may find a comer of retreat in Starbo
* or Skinsburg. All will depend on a respite of four or five
' years ; yet I clearly see that long plans are like long roofs,
' apt to tumble in ; for man proposes ; but God disposes. I
* have however always thought that a man should know what
*' he is aiming at, and ever have a clear design for life and
^ business before him.'
Again —
* I have taken a little leisure this summer to put a few
' things on paper, which / think will be my last productions ;
^ for speculations and inventions like mine find no patronage,
* nor bread in Sweden, and are considered by a number of
^ political blockheads as a sort of school-boy exercise, which
*' ought to stand quite in the back ground, while their finesse
' and intrigues step forward.'
These melancholy humours were dissipated by a tour of
fifteen months on the Continent, commencing in the Spring of
1721. He took with him, as a companion, John Hessel, a
physician, and a large bundle of manuscript, which, as soon as
he arrrived at Amsterdam, he put to press.
In May he addressed a letter to Jacob a Melle, a savan of
Lubeck, describing some marine deposits in Sweden, and the
retreat of the Baltic, by which towns were left high and dry,
which once stood on the sea shore. Some tracts of land,
formed of sand, pebbles and shells, he concludes were once
the bed of the ocean. Hills and valleys, he thinks, were
formed by the strong currents of the ancient seas. The
enormous water-worn boulders scattered over the soil of many
Swedish provinces, he takes to be evidences of the immense
force of the currents in that sea. Modem geologists, granting
64 PUBLICATIOKS AT AMSTSBDAM.
the water, maintain that its corrents were unequal to the
carriage of these erratic boulders, and that they must have
been floated from difis and lull-ndes attadied to icebergs, and
dropped irregularlj as the ice dissolved.
He concludes —
^It is most pleasant to search out the causes of ihings,
^ and to listen to those, who have the genius to penetrate the
^ secrets of Nature, and the industry to evolre the Ancient
* from the Modem World.'
The letter was printed in the ^Acta Literaria SuecicR^ a
repository of literary and scientific papers, edited by some
Swedish virtuosos, to whidi Swedenborg contributed. Towards
the end of 1721 he published in Latin, at Amsterdam^ ihe
following pamphlets : —
* 1. Specimens of a Work on the Principles cfNaiural
^ Philosophy^ comprising New Attempts to explain the
* Phenomena of Chemistry and Physics by Geometry,^
^ 2. New Observations and Discoveries respecting Iron
^and Fire^ and particularly respecting the Elemental
^ Nature of Fire : together with a New Construction of
* Stoves:
^ 3. A New Method of Finding ihe Longitudes of
*' Places on Land or ai Sea by Lunar Observations^
^ 4. A New Mechanical Plan of Constructing Docks
^ and Dykes:
* 5. A Mode of Discovering the Powers of Vessels by
* the Application of Mechanical Principles:
The treatise on Chemistry is accurately entitled * Specimens .•'
it is composed of chapters taken from a complete manuscript
work, which at this day rests in the library of the Royal
Academy of Sciences in Stockholm. The * Specimens ' com-
mence with Part Vm. and continues to Part XIV., where an
article on Colours intervenes, and then Part XXV. concludes
Ae whole, with the promise that the rest will be published
* God willingi at another opportunity.'
CHEMISTRY IS ATOMIC MECHANICS. 65
A Bchoolmaster was once asked, ^' Why are cream and
^^ sugar put into tea?" and he answered, "To render the
** acute angles of the tea more obtuse." His reply involves
and illustrates Swedenborg's theory of Chemistry.
His doctrine was, that the invisible atoms, with which the
chemist deals are geometrical forms, and that chemical phe-
nomena are to be explained by geometrical laws. ^ For,' he
asks, *what are Physics and Chemistry? What is their
nature, if not a peculiar mechanism? What is there in
Nature, which is not geometrical ? What is the variety of
experiments in Chemistry, but a variety of position, figure,
weight and motion in particles ? '
He continues — * The reader will be equally astonished ynih
myself, that the knowledge of invisibles has remained hidden
firom the learned world up to the present time, when so many
experiments respecting them are on record. J£ we look to
Physics, we shall find, that it abounds in experiments and
discoveries. More light has been shed upon Physics in the
way of experiment during the last century, than in any
previous age : indeed, 'so far as facts are concerned, Physics
have reached a meridian degree of brightness. If we consider
Chemistry, with what experiments is it not enriched I So
greatly has it exercised the industry of the learned, that we
possess thousands of guides towards penetrating its secrets.
1£ Greometry, to what a height has it not been carried by the
men of science of our time I It seems indeed to have scaled
the sacred hill, and, for all human purposes, to have attained
the utmost perfection.
^ Since then we have several thousand experiments indi-
cating the nature of the various metals, salts and elements,
and since these bodies consist of groups of particles, varying
in their shapes and positions in a certain geometrical arrange-
ment ; therefore we have every reason to conclude, that the
law of their structure may now be demonstrated.'
In illustration of his theory he adduces many experiments
P
66 CHEMISTBT AND THE LONGITUDE.
taken from Bovle, Boerhaave, and others, and some original ;
aud by a free use of diagrams makes himself clearly under-
stood. The experiments in these times would be considered
absurdly crude, and imperfect ; but the pith and merit of the
' Specimens ' lies in its theory of the geometrical forms of atoms:
and the century of research, which has followed Swedenborg,
has done much to sustain, and justify his speculation.
He only cursorily states his doctrine of colour in the
* Specimens^^ but it should be here noted ; for he held it
throughout his life, and freely applied its analogies in spiritual
regions. Colour he attributes to the forms of the particles
of bodies on which light falls, and by which it is absorbed,
reflected aud refi*acted in modes as infinite as there are shades
of colour.
' The New Observations and Discoveries respecting Iron
' and Fire ' are mainly technical, ' from actual data, collected
* from the workmen at a large iron furnace.' Than the
* Elemental Nature of Fire^^ he says, ' no question can be more
^ embarrassing. The mechanism of fire, the forms of its
^ particles, and its theory have produced the most bewildering
^ speculation.' His own notion is, ^ that the particles of fire
' are bullular, most elastic, and exquisitely mobile.'
The * New Method of Finding tlie Longitude of Places^ on
^ Landj or at Sea^ by Lunar Observations^* is a Latin version
of his Swedish pamphlet of 1718. The plan was to deduce
the longitude from the apparent position of the moon if in a
line, or at some angle with at least two visible fixed stars,
whose exact angular distances from the Moon for that moment,
as seen from some fixed place (as Greenwich or Paris) were
marked in an astronomical Almanack or ^ Ephemeria,' the
difference between the registered and observed distances being
cleared of paralax and refraction, and reduced to degrees and
mmutt's, and thence to miles east or west, gave the longitude
of the [»lace of obscrvatloti, or its distance east or west from
such fixed point or meridian. This method was adopted
PUBLISHES MORE PAMPHLETS. 67
with 8ucce« by some marinen., unW Harrison's chronometerB
smoothed awaj most of the difficulties.
Swedenborg's visit to Amsterdam was prompted by the
desire to bring his pamphlets mider the notice of the learned
men of Europe, and at the same time to avail himself of the
services of Dutch printers and engravers in their production.
The printer, Joannem Ooosterwyk, whom he employed served
him very badly ; his typographical errata are shamefully
numerous.
Boerhaave was in 1721 at the height of his fame, and
lecturing as professor of chemistry and botany at the Uni-
versity of Leyden. To him Swedenborg would, there is
little question, present his packet of printed observation and
speculation, and have some generous discussion on matters of
profound interest to both.
From Amsterdam, Swedenborg set out for Leipsic through
Li^ge, Aix-la-Chapelle, and Cologne, visiting the mines and
smelting works, which lay in his route. From Lifege, 29 No-
vember, 1721, he sent home a paper, ' New Mules for Main"
' taining Heat in Rooma^^ which was printed in the * Ada
^ Literaria Svecics.^ In it he maintains, that wooden houses
are warmer than stone ones, and brick than stone, if well
built; and advises that where warmth is desired, brick or stone
walls should be lined ynih wainscot, or hung with tapestry.
At Leipsic in 1722, he published in three parts, ' Miscel--
* laneous Observational dedicated to Count Gustavus Bonde,
President of the Boyal Metallic College of Sweden ; and in
the same year at Schififbeck, near Hamburg, a fourth part,
dedicated to the Duke of Brunswick : all copiously illustrated
with engravings.
The ' Observational are gossip on a few out of the many
scientific plans and fancies seething in his brain. We find
in them remarks on the marine origin of some Swedish
mountains; proofs, that what is now dry land was once sea
bottom, from fossils found by him and Dr. Hessel at Aix-la-
F 2
68 ^^ MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS.^^
Chapelle — on the world at one time being a vast globe of
water — on the origin, temperature and saline components <^
hot springs — on vitrification or the change of particles into
glass — on the decomposition of stones by air and moisture— on
the entrance and egress of liquids, ^ as for example water and
* fire,' into and firom hard bodies — on stoves, fire-places, and
wind and draught furnaces — on the cure of smoky chinmeys —
on an air-pump worked by mercury — on cheap methods of
salt-making — on a new mode of weighing metals — on the glass
of Archimedes— on an instrument for discovering the propor-
tions of mixed metals mechanically without any calculation—
on the impossibility of transmuting metals, especially into
gold — on the reasons why the blood circulates through the
capillaries more easily than through the arteries — that particles
are geometrical forms, and chemistry and organization are to
be explained on geometrical principles — that there is no central
fire in the earth, et cetera.
The fourth part of the ' Observations^ gives an account of
* the new system of Notation, based on the niunber 64, invented
* by Charles XII., of glorious memory,' and of the minerals,
iron and stalactites of Baumaim's Caverns. The dedication
to Ludwig Rudolph, Duke of Brunswick and Lnneburg, is
after the extravagant fashion of the time — whidi to us, irreve-
rent modems, looks like quizzing, elegantly done: it runs
thus —
* Most Serene Prince, — ^The following pages are too unim-
* portant to constitute a worthy offering to your Highness, at
* whose feet tlie great works of the masters of learning are
^ deserving to be laid, but as small things frequently afford
^ pleasure to illustrious men, and as your Highness is aware
* that victims of slender value were presented at the altars of
^ the gods, and, that a little frankincense was offered in pro*
^ pitiation to these divinities ; so I also, encouraged by such
' great precedents, am not without hope, that these few pages,
* which I have ventured to dedicate to your most Serene
RUINED WITH PRINTERS^ ERRATA. 69
' Highness, and to place upon jour altar, may meet with a
^ gracious reception, were it for no other reason, than that in
' part I present you with your own, with a record derived from
^ the Baumann's Cavern, to which my access was your own
^ most gracious permission. Still the greatest reliance that I
^ have in supplicating your favour, is in the knowledge, that
^ you are as illustrious in spirit as in descent, as distinguished
^ in mind as in renown, and, that the world accords to your
^ personal virtues the same free honour as to the extended
^ sway and imperial diadem of the Caesars.
' If the offering I bring is small, my veneration at least is
^ greater than my offering — ^nay, so great, that I desire nothing
' more ardently, than to be permitted to be,
* Most Serene Prince,
' Your most humble and devoted Servant,
* Emanuel Swedenborg.'
Duke Budolph was, if not quite a demigod, at least, an
excellent Prince, and took Swedenborg under his patronage,
and became very serviceable to him, as we shall see.
The German printers served Swedenborg even worse than
the Dutch. The ^Miscellanea Ohservata^ are riddled with
errata^ and critics, too lazy to do anything else, detected them*
Indeed, so many were these blunders, that at the head of a
long list of alterations and omissions, he says, ^ As innumerable
* tjrpographical errors have crept in, owing to the negUgence
* of the person appointed to revise the press, the. work scarcely
* admits of correction ; the reader would therefore do well to
^ throw it aside ; as a revised edition will shortly be published.'
A second edition never appeared.
At Midsummer, 1722, Swedenborg and Dr. Hessel returned
home, after an absence of about fifteen months.
( 70 )
CHAPTER VII.
TWELVE YEARS OF BUSINESS AND SILENCE.
A TREATISE ' On the DeprecicUion^ and Rise of the Bvoediah
' Curreacy^ published anonymously at Stockholm in 1722,
terminated Swedenborg's desultory pamphleteering, and during
twelve years, from 1722 to 1734, he printed nothing.
Looking over the packet of pamphlets and of letters ho has
produced, we discern in them a man eager to know and quick
to apprehend, a ready learner; but not one who absorbs
knowledge implicitly, and sits down satisfied ; but who tests
and questions it, and who would fain carry out every truth
to new issues, and be an enlarger and discoverer of knowledge.
Though speculative, his speculations have all an end towards
practice, with many adventurous notions he is yet so prosaic
and shrewd, that you would never call him romantic. His
tastes and pursuits are various, but they all open into the
mechanical plane. Religion is no more in his thoughts. He has
left the Angels of his childhood, not in contempt, but forgetful-
ness, having other business on hand. Of reverence he has
plainly, little, of self-satisfaction, much ; fully assured of his
own worth, we feel, that he felt himself peer to any man.
It would seem that in 1722, he came for the first time into
the full pay and exercise of his Assessorship. We must now
picture Swedcnborg during twelve years to come, from his
thirty-fourth to his forty-sixth year, as an industrious official
through the day, and giving his leisure hours to study, and the
composition of three great folios : one, a laborious description
PIETISM IN SWEDEN. 71
of the mode in which matter was created, and two, on the
processes by which iron and copper were led out of ore into
human service. Of this long stretch in his life we have little
more to say. As to who were his companions, and what were
his enjoyments there is no record known : quite likely, none
ever madj.
In 1724' he was ojBTered the Professorship of Mathematics
in the University of Upsala, which he declined. We may
learn his reason perhaps in this piece taken from one of his
letters to Benzelius —
^ I wonder at Messieurs the mathematicians having lost all
'heart and spirit to realize that fine design of yours for an
' astronomical observatory. It is the fatality of mathema*
* ticians to abide in theory. I have often thought it would be
' a capital thing, if to each ten mathematicians one good practical
' man were added, to lead them to market : he would be of
' more use and mark than all the ten.'
Bishop Svedberg was meanwhile busy as ever. The
Swedish Church was then, as now, dead in formalism. A few
earnest Pietists, chiefly among the laity, sought to difluse a
Divine influence, which had stirred in their hearts, by meetings
for prayer and preaching, held at their own houses. As Me-
thodism in England aroused the jealousy and opposition of the
Clergy, so did Pietism in Sweden. The offices of religion
were held by Swedish and English Priests, in common with
Popish, to be exclusively their business ; and it was sacrilege
for vulgar hands to meddle therewith.
Svedberg had a kindly feeling towards Pietism. When a
young man abroad, his heart yearned towards the Grerman
Pietists, and throughout life he had been charged with Pietistic
sympathies.
The conduct of the Swedish Pietists was warmly discussed
in the Diet. It chanced on one occasion that Svedberg had
spread before him on a table in the Diet some sheets of a Swedish
72 BISHOP SVEDBKRG AND THE PIETISTS.
translation of Scriver's * Treasure for SoulaJ** These sheets
one Dr. Edzberg spied, and rising in his place he charged
Svedberg with complicity in Pietistic heresy ; for, said he, * Is he
^ not preparing to circulate a book, which is steeped in the
* very spirit of Pietism? ' * Yet,' writes Svedberg, * this same
^ good Doctor daily attested his orthodoxy by getting drunk ;
^ and pleaded as an excuse, that aching teeth required firee
^ libations of c^ua vitrnJ*
That he might speak from experience Svedberg attended
a conventicle of Pietists, and the same day rose in the Diet
and said —
^ There has been a great deal spoken here In derinon and
^ avendon concerning these assemblies of Pietists. I am now
'the only clergyman present, and therefore must speak. I
' have to-day been to a meeting of Pietists, and I only wish
' that every master in Sweden held such meetings under his
' roof.'
Against the opinion of the Pietists, that an unconverted
Priest was unfit to minister in sacred things, he protested —
' It was a very dangerous doctrine. An anxious man sends
< for a clergyman, and is by him absolved from his sins, but
* Christian Scrirer, whose ' Treasure for SouU^ Svedberg esteemed 'more
' than all gold and silverf' was bom at Rostock in 1629, became pastor of the
Church of 8t. James in Magdeburg in 1667, and court preacher at Quedlin-
bnrg in 1690, where in 1693 he died. Scriver, as a preacher, had an amaaing
reputation, and his writings were devoured wherever the German language
was read. Spcner, a chief among the Pietists, said — * In Scriver I am sensible
' of a much larger measure of grace, than has been allotted to myself.'
Another admirer says of him — ' Scriver evinces a profound piety, conscious
' at every moment, and in every place of being encompassed, upheld, and
' cherished by God. Scriver is always before God, in God, and with God.
' His life was a life in God. As he could not but eat and drink, so he could
' not but pray.' Scriver's writings arc now forgotten, except by a few curious
readers. One of his works, ' Ootthokfs Emblems^ or invUible tkinffi umder-
* stood by things thtU are made^^ was translated from the twenty -eighth German
edition, by the Rev. Robert Menzies, of Hoddam, and published in Edinburgh
in 1857. Anyone who wishes to know the kind of literature, in which Bishop
Svedberg luxuriated, will find a good specimen in ' QoUkMs Embkms.*
THE BI8H0P AND HIS SON JESPER. 73
^ afterwards he falls into doubt as to whether his absolution is
' worth anything ; since he fancies, the minister is unconverted ;
^ but as a ducat loses nothing of its value though tendered by
^ an unclean hand, so absolution is not affected by ihe character
' of the administrator/
Whilst defending the Pietists, he would not be ranked with
them —
^ I have never taken to reading Pietist books, for which I
^ had no taste, nor have I had anything to do with Pietists ; but
' a very great deal too much with numerous Impietists. Would
^ to God we were all true Pietists after the pattern of St. Paul
« and St. Peter !'
To Sweden's great misfortune the Clergy triumphed. The
Pietists were condemned, and the Diet passed a law forbidding
all attempts at public worship outside the established Church.
This done the Priesthood at once relapsed into sleep with
security.
Jesper Swedenborg, the Bishop's youngest son, had turned
sailor, and after being abroad for several years, returned to
Stockholm in 1724. His father troubled, that he should have
reached thirty ¥rithout any fixed purpose in life, writes to him
as follows —
« Brunsbo, 20th April, 1724.
* 1 forgot to mention my dear wife's will. (His second wife,
^ their step-mother, who died in 1720). She had resolved, that
^ at her death Emanuel should inherit her property at Starbo.
' When I saw her dying, I reminded her of this. She then
^ repeated her resolve ; whereon I prayed her not to exclude
^ my other children. She answered, '^ They may have equal
^ '^ shares, but Emanuel shall be sole owner of Starbo, provided
< ^^ he buy the others out." Of this I have ^ven him an
^ assurance for your sakes.
^ You may thank God, that you will have a good round sum.
^ Had I so chosen, none of you, but I alone, according to law,
74 NOTIONS ABOUT MARRIAGE.
^ should have inherited her property ; but I wished jon well,
^ and what is more, I paid claims to the amomit of 6,000 dalers
^ on the estate, and will pay any more which may come due,
^ as Emanuel can tell you.
^ This, you, and not I, ought to have done ; but I am father,
^ and you children, and I am ever thinking of your welfare.
^ Let me now see you agree as brothers, and may I never hear
^ of want of unity among you, that my overflowing kindness
^ may not come to sorrow.
^ See that you find some occupation where you are. It is
^ no use being in Sweden to fritter away your best days in
* idleness. You write well, you reckon well, and thank Ood
^ you are not married. See that you get a good wife^ and some'
' thing with her. Pray God to lead you in His holy way.
^ Your kind fitther,
^ Jesper Stedbero.'
Jesper married in 1728, and through his family the name
of Swedenborg is perpetuated to this day. Whether his wife
had as much ^ with her,' besides goodness, as his father en-
joined, we are not informed. Albrecht, it will be remembered,
died in boyhood — Eliezer married in 1710, and died in 1711
witliout issue — and Emanuel lived to the end, a bachelor.
Swedenborg did not live a bachelor without remonstrance.
When in his forty-second year, we find his brother-in-law,
the Reverend Jonas Unge, addressing to him these words of
warning and encouragement —
' Wanga, 18 May, 1729.
^ Now finally I shall give you something to think about.
* AVhy do you allow all good opportunities of marrying to slip
* past you ? Major Otter is betrothed to Thamen's elder
^ daughter ; but after all his younger daughter is by far the better
*' and prettier of the two. Now, my beloved brother, will you not
* take measures accordingly ? I have no reason to believe, but
^ that Thameu will approve of you. The money with each,
^ I believe, will bo oonsiderablo, so that my brother could not
WHY DID SWEDENBORQ NOT MARBT? 75
^possibly have a better partner in all Sweden. In God's
^ name, make up a good resolution, and trust the issue to His
^ gracious providence. Time does not allow long deliberations,
^ and there is danger in delay.
^ My wife desires her best salutations.
* I am, my dear brother, your obedient servant,
* Jonas Unge.'
What was Swedenborg's reply to this remons^unce we do
not know ; neither do we know his reasons for his confirmed
celibacy. After the custom of unmarried men in the upper
ranks of life in Sweden, and especially Stockholm, he kept a
Mistress ;* and she, assisted by his absorption in business and
study, may have conspired to keep him unwedded.
In 1729 the Academy of Sciences in Stockhohn elected
Swedenborg a member.
Fire pursued Bishop Svedberg to the end of his life; again
in 1730 was his palace burnt down ; and being an old man of
77, his nerves were so shaken, that he could no more write
with a steady hand, and his health, which had always been
excellent began to decline, and his memory to grow feeble.
* See *New Jerusalem Moffozine,^ toL L, page 263. London, 1790.
( 76 )
CHAPTER VIIL
TRAVELUNG AND PRINTING IN GERMANY.
Haying completed the great work, which he had been
writing for so many years, Swedenborg set out for Leipsic on
the 10th of May, 1733, to have it printed. He has left a
meagre itinerary of his route, firom which we shall read a few
passages.
First he made a short Grerman tour, in company with
Count Frederick Gyllenborg and a few other friends. They
landed at Stralsund, and there surveyed the traces of the great
nege of 1715. After visiting Griefsvalde, they went on to
Berlin, where they spent a few days.
Beriin was be^nning to rise into high rank among European
capitals under the shrewdly eccentric power of Prussia's rude
King, Frederick William, the hard father of Frederick the
Great, who at that time was a young man of twenty-two,
just released from prison and a paternal sentence of death, to
be forced into a marriage of state convenience.
Berlin charmed Swedenborg. * The royal palace,' he writes,
^ is very magnificent, in size and height surpassing the palaces
^ of many kings. The houses of the citizens are nimaerous, and
*' built like those of Italy and Paris. Outside old Berlin a new
* city is springing up, under the direction of the King. Its
^ best street, you would imagine to consist of the houses of
^ Nobles ; whereas in them dwell artizans, who would elsewhere
^ inhabit small houses and huts. The eye is delighted, the
^ mind exhilarated by the wonderful uniformity and contiguity
^ of all the houses. It may be said, that many thousands of
^ men live in one house, and under one roof.
BERLIN AND DRESDEN. 77
* The cily is very populous, dense crowds walk the streets,
^and multitades assemble in the courts, and public places.
* Manufactures flourish, as many skilled workmen have fled
^ firom persecution in France, and have settled here.'
Frederick William's taU soldiers did not pass unnoticed.
' K thej could fight to the same perfection as they go through
* their drill, Pruseda might conquer Europe ; but . Their
^ dress is admirable and magnificent, it allows full fireedom of
^ motion and makes a fine show ; yet beneath all this military
' ^lendour, the parsimony of the Eang is evident.'*
In the royal library he found a large number of books, but
chiefly old ones, not much in request, a collection made on the
principle of getting a great bulk of literature for a little money.
From Berlin he went to Dresden, and on the way, ^ read
'the treatise of Pluto on the ship-worms of Friesland and
* Northland.
^ June 7. — I came to Dresden having been on my journey
' firom Stockholm twenty-eight days ; but if the twelve days,
'on which I rested be subtracted, the journey would only
* consist of sixteen days.'
Dresden he went over as he did Berlin, and makes a
catalogue of its remarkable sights.
^ JwM 14<A to 19(^. — I read over my ^ Brincipia^ and
* made corrections.
^•/ime 21. — This day I went to the chapel royal of the
^ Duke of Saxony, to see the sacred service performed accord-
^ ing to the rites of the Roman Catholic Church. Everything
' was employed that could captivate and delight the senses ;
' there were all lunds of musical instruments, and also eunuchs,
' whose voice imitated that of virgins, — ^nothing was wanting
' to delight the sense of hearing ; the fragrance, tliat proceeded
* firom the incense, carried about by boys, was most grateful to
'the smell, and our eyes were charmed with pictures, hung
• * IiinM'wri\m: Tvhingen, 1840.
78 SWEDENBOBG MEETS PHILOSOPHER WOLF.
^ round the building, and with the magnificent dresses of the
^ priests, who, not unlike harlequins, went gesticulating about.
^ All things appear to breathe solemnity and sanctity, and at
^ the least sound of a bell, all fall on their knees. The whole
^ service is performed in Latin, which strikes with awe the
^ common people. The worship of the Roman Catholic Church
^ seems contrived to blandish and intoxicate the senses.
* July 10. — At Mr. Secretary Ruger's I saw the * Cosmo^
^ ^ logiam Gen&ralemC of John Christian Wolf, who has
^ endeavoured to establish the nature of elements from merely
^ metaphysical principles, which is based upon a very sound
^ foundation.'
This meeting with Wolf had in it much pleasantaiess. He
found, that his thoughts and Wolf's had been running in the
same channels : and to generous thinkers, not burning with a
selfish lust of originality, such coincidence is full with the joy
of sympathy.
^ Illustrious Wolf was recognized, at that time, as the
' second greater Leibnitz, and head philosopher of Nature, who
^ by ^^ mathematical method '' had as it were taken Nature in
^ the fact, and illuminated everything, so that whosoever ran
^ might read, — ^which all manner of people then tried to do,
* but have now quite ceased trying by the Wolf method.'*
From Dresden he went to Prague where he arrived
^ July 23. — I walked through the city, and across the
' bridge over the Moldau, which is supported on eighteen
^ arches, and on which there are many images, and at each
* end a turret, in which are still to be seen the balls, which the
* Swedes fired into them in 1648. I went to the cathedral
' church of St Vita, where I saw the sepulchre of Martin
^ Sobieslav, on each side of which there is a silver altar,
' and above each a heart made of pure gold. Around the
' altars are sacrificial gifts, in great number, of silver hearts,
• Carlyle's * Frederick the Great,' vol. i., page 622.
COMMENCES PBINTIKQ IN LEIPSIC. 79
^ feet, and hair, and many others. ... I also went to see the
^ whole citji which is of considerable size, and saw the place
^ where women used to fight their husbands . I
^ Tisited the church of St Nicholas belonging to the Jesuits,
^ who possess manj churches and splendid buildings. There
^ are in the city above one hundred churches and fifty monas-
^ teries ; the city contains eighty thousand inhabitants. The
^ Jews' quarter has everything in it dirty and filthy. . . I saw
^ the church, in which wood is preserved, said to have been
^brought by the Devil from Rome. Statues abound in the
^ streets and squares.'
From Prague he made a tour among the mines of Bohemia,
and, bemg deeply concerned in mining affairs, he records many
observations in his ^Itinerary .*' these, except to a metallurgist,
have little interest.
To Dresden he returned on the 25th of August, and oA the
2nd of September set out for Leipsic, arriving there on the 4th.
To the final preparation of his work for the press he now be-
stowed his time, and his ^ Itinerary ' concludes with this entry —
' 5th October. — The printing of the ^ Princtpia^ is begun,
^and six sheets this week are printed. The gods bless it!
^ The Leipsic fair this day commenced.'
The supervision of the printing of his great work the ' Opera
^ PhUoMophica et Mitieralia^^ and the execution of its numerous
engraved illustrations occupied the last months of 1733 and
the first of 1734. At the same time stimulated by the con-
firmation of his mechanical philosophy in the newly-discovered
writings of Wolf, he wrote a short work on ' The Infinite.^
At the bcgimmig of 1734 both works were published con-
jointly at Leipsic sgad Dresden.
Swedenborg now turned homewards through Hesse-
Casael, inspecting its mines on the way. The great attraction
in Hesse-Cassel however, was Philosopher Wolf. Wolf had
Ijceu driven from his professorship in the University of Halle
by the terrors of Frederick William of Prussia, and had found
80 P&IIfCE FRBDEBICK, VOLTAIRE, AND WOLF.
refoge and favour at the hands of the Landgrave of Heate-
Casael, who appointed Uhi professor of mathematics and
philosophy at the University of Marhurg. Here Swedenborg
made acquaintance with the great man, and chatted, and
settled, and re-settled the origin of the imiverse by ^ mathe-
^ matical method' to their perfect satisfaction.
Persecuted by King Frederick William, it was some con-
solation to Wolf to find an ardent admirer in Prince Frederick.
Frederick had WolTs Latin writings translated, that he might
study them ; and writing to Voltaire, at Cirey, firom Berlin,
8th August, 1736, he recommends Wolf to his notice as ^ the
'most celebrated Philosopher of our days, who, for having
' carried Hght into the darkest places of metaphysics, is cruelly
* accused of irreligion and atheism. Such is the destiny of
' our great men ; their superior genius exposes them to the
* poisoned arrows of calumny and envy.'
Voltaire's answer to this is worth quoting—
* Cirey, 26 August, 1736.
' I cannot sufficiently thank your Royal Highness for the
*gifk of that little book about Monsieur Wolf. I respect
' metaphysical ideas, rays of lightning they are, in the midst
^ of deep night. More, I think, is not to be hoped from Me-
^ taphysics. It does not seem likely that the First PrincipleM
^ of things will ever be known. The mice that nestle in some
' Uttle holes of an immense building, know not whether it is
^ eternal, or who the Architect, or why he built it, Such mice
* are we ;* and the Divine Architect who built the Universe
* The analogy does not hold. Men do wonder concerning the Univene and
its Maker, and their questions concerning both are satisfied more and more as
they foUow right methods of inquiry. Mice neither wonder nor deaire to
understand anything of the building in which they nestle ; if they did, doubt-
less they would have been endowed vrith inteUects by which they might
apprehend the Architect. Our Maker created in us the desire to know Him ;
and that desire He did not create for perpetual hunger and torment, but for
gratification. Talk like this of Vultiire's is usually an affected humility,
and the presage and apology of soau rcifonndiug piece of arrogance.
SWEDENBORQ'a RELATION TO WOLF. 81
^iiat wiyetj that I know of, told his secret to one of us. If
* anybody opuld pretend to guess correctly, U is M. Wolf.'
Wolf 'a terminology Swedenborg adopted for some yaars
ai^r this in his writings, and his influence upon him was
great; less however as a master than as a friend who con*
firmed and sustained his speculations.
Swedenborg's * Prtncipid* was written before he knew
Wolf, or read his books; but in the last paragraph of the
^ Principid' he confesses important obligations to him, adding,
that whoever will take the pains to compare his work with
WolTs, will see that their principles almost exactly coincide.
In an incomplete manuscript of Swedenborg's we find
these remarks, which are interesting as showing his regard
for Wolf.
* A comparison of ' Tlie Ontology^ and * The General
* * Cosmology^ of Christian Wolf with my ' PrincipiaJ* '
' I wish to institute a comparison between my 'iVtnctjpm'
and the rules of Metaphysics, with it view to enable me in
some measure to judge of the foundations upon which my
philosophy and theory repose, and whether their parts are
geometrically and metaphysically true, or the reverse. There
is no better source for this test, than the ' Cosmology ' of the
learned Christian Wolf, who may be justly styled a true
philosopher, since he has drawn out the principles of a true
philosophy with unwearied care, scrutiny and elaboration,
and teaches them metaphysically, and in the most regular
order, and at the same time scientifically and by experiment.
Let us see then whether there be consent between us, or any
dissent.
* In rational philosophy Wolf treats admirably of the mode
of philosophizing. "The liberty of philosophizing," says he,
" should be allowed to those who philosophize in a philoso-
" phical manner* and from this concession, no danger need
* And if they do not, what then ? May Frederick William in that case
interfere?
O
-r»
82 BRUNSWICK ANb ^i^^EDEKBOBO.
^ ^ be apprehended either foi* religion^ virtue^ or the state."
' Again he says-^*' Without liberty in philosophyi progress in
^ ^^ knowledge is impossible." And fnrther : ^^ A place must
^ ^' be granted in philosophy to philosophical hypothesis, inas-
' " much as they prepare the way for discovering real truth."
^ And again : ^^ K any one philosophize in a philosophical
^ ^' manner, he has no need to refute opposite opinions." '
Wolf derived his philosophy from Descartes and Leibnitz,
whose successor he may be considered. Swedenborg was
thoroughly united with Wolf in opinion, and in speaking of
the ideas of the one we speak of those of the other.
From Caasel Swedenborg went to Gotha, and thence to
Brunswick, on a visit to Duke Rudolph who had munificently
defrayed the whole cost of the printing of his * Opera Philo-
^ sophica et Mineralia.^ To him the great work was inscribed,
offered as incense to a god, in another of those absurd dedica-
tions which were the fashion of the age. The Duke died in
the following year, and in him Swedenborg lost an intelligent
and liberal friend.
Swedenborg returned to Stockholm in July, 1734.
A'"
"'/
( 83 )
CHAPTER IX.
PHILOSOPHICAL AND MINERALOGICAL WORKS .•
These works are contained in three handsome folios, copiously
illustrated with engravings. A portrait of the author in his
robes of office forms a gracefnl frontispiece to the first : a fair
copy of which we present on another page.
We may dispose of the second and third of these volumes
at once. They are practical and technical^ giving an account
of iron and copper mining, and the processes of manufacture
in use last century. To metallurgists they must ever have an
abiding interest as a broad land-mark in the history of their art.
His publication of trade secrets was not approved by tlie
selfish and narrow-minded, and of such he observes—
* There are persons who love to hold knowledge for them-
^ selves alone, and to be reputed possessors and guardians of
* secrets. People of this kind grudge the public everything,
* and if any discovery, by which Art and Science will be
* Tom. I. — ' Principia Rerom Nataraliam sive Novomm Tentamiimm
' Phsnomena Mundi Elementaris Philosophice Explicandi.'
Tom. II. — 'Reg^nm Subterraneum sivo Minerale de Forro deque Modis
' Liquationiim Ferri per Earopam passim in usum rcceptis: deque conyersione
' ferri cmdiin chalybem: deyena ferri et probatione qjiis: pariter dochymicis
' prsparitis et oom forro et victriolo ejus factls experimentis.'
Tom. III. — ' RegDum Subterraneum sive Minerale de Cupro et Oricbaico
' modis liquationum cupri per Europam passim in usum receptis: do seoretioue
' ejus ab arg^nto: de conversione in Oricbalcam : inque Metalla diyersi generis :
' de Lapide Calaminari : de Zinco : de Vena Cupri et probatione ejus : pariter
* de chymiois preparatis, et cum cupro factis expcrimentiSi &c. &c.'
' Cum flgfiris sneis. Dresdse et Lipsia), Sumptibus Frederici Hekciii,
* BibliopobB Regii, 1734.'
O 2
84 THE METHOD OP THE P&INCIPIA.
* benefitted, comes to light, they regard it askance with scowl-
' ing visages, and probably denounce the discoverer as a
' babbler, who lets out mysteries. Why should real secrets be
' grudged to the public ? why withheld from this enlightened
' Age ? WTiatever is worth knowing should by all means be
' brought into the great and common Market of the World.
* Unless this be done, we can neither grow wiser, nor happier
' with time.'
These are right liberal words, having the savour of a spirit
often claimed as peculiar to ' our own enlightened Age.'
Our interest lies in the first volume, entitled, ' Principia^
' or the First Principles of Natural Things^ being New Attempts
' towards a philosophical explanation of the Elementary World.^
The work is an attempt to show how atoms of matter were
created; and, as Earths are congregations of atoms, how Earths
were created. Picking up a grain of sand, Swedenborg would
show us how it proceeded out of nothingness, how it grew, how
it came to have its place in the universe of things.
By what means did he hope to steal from Nature the
secret of her Genesb? We shall better answer that question
after hearing what he has to say concerning the means to a
true philosophy.
These means, says Swedenborg, are three — Experience,
Reason, Geometry.
Experience, he thinks, is the only way to Wisdom. It is
impossible to receive Knowledge directly from the Soul.
Knowledge is attained solely tlirough the Senses ; but, whilst
Knowledge or Experience is thus procured, we must be careful
not to confound Knowledge with Reason or Wisdom.
In Knowledge or Experience are found the mere materials
with which Reason builds ; yet, without Knowledge, it would
be impossible for Reason either to grow, or to exist. Daily we
see much Knowledge without Reason; the learned man, with
a gorged memory, taken by a shallow world for the wise man,
or the man of Reason, and crowned with the laurels of genius.
THE WAY TO THE INMOST SECRET OF NATURE. 85
To Knowledge or Experience must then be added Beason.
Reason is that fine faculty of the Soul, by which Knowledge is
ruled, analysed, classified, and reduced to laws and analogies.
Reason, from facts or things known, elicits a second, a third,
or a fourth truth, hitherto unknown. Reason is the mark of
the true philosopher; and Reason, to attain her ends, must
invoke the aid of all the Sciences, but chiefly Geometry.
Under the empire of Greometry are the three Kingdoms —
the Mineral ; the Vegetable, the Animal ; and, if it be per-
mitted to call it a fourth, the Elemental.
The Elemental Kingdom comprises those substances, which
are by their own nature fluid ; every one of their particles
having its own peculiar powers of motion and elasticity. A
collection of these particles constitutes an Element, such as Air,
or Ether, or others still more subtile.
The investigation of this Elemental Kingdom is the pur-
pose of the ' Prtnctpia.^
All the things of the Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, and
Elemental Kingdoms are mechanical^ and possess motion and
limits. The whole World is a pure system of Mechanism.
The Animal Kingdom is mechanical as to its bodily organiza-
tion. Hence, by Greometry, all are to be investigated and
understood.
The whole World being mechanical, it follows, that the
smallest things and the largest are governed by similar me-
chanical laws; and, though the particles of the Elemental
Kingdom are invisible, and in a great measure elude the
observation of the Senses, yet, as they are fluent and bounded,
they must be geometrical, and flow and exist in a mechanical
manner.
The Method of Nature is everywhere the same ; what is
true of the least is true of the greatest ; the force that shapes
a dew-drop forms a world ; the mechanism of the trunk of an
elephant and of a fly is the same. The philosopher must not
86 THE FINITE IS NOT WHOLLY MECHANICAL.
be deluded by size and supposed difference. There is the same
ratio between 1,000,000 and 5,000,000 as there is between
•0,000,001 and -0,000,005. This truth is of inestimable value,
because by analogies drawn from the seen we can advance to
the unseen, and speak of the unseen as if it lay under the eye.
Some things are not mechanical.
Though the World is constituted in a mechanical manner,
and is explained by Geometry, it does not follow that all things
whatsoever are to be thus explained. There are innumerable
things not mechanical. There is the Infinite, altogether with-
out and above the sphere of Greometry. From the Infinite the
Finite is derived, and from the Infinite the Finite only and
momently lives. To the Infinite then everything Finite has
reference, not excepting Greometry. The Infinite can by no
means bo geometrically explored, because the existence of the
Infinite is prior to Geometry, being its cause.
Tliero is also that intelligent principle which exists in
animals, which is their Soul, and which with the body makes
their life. What is the nature of this intelligence Greometry
has hitherto been unable to discover, and we are yet ignorant
whether the laws to which the Soul is subject are similar to
those of Mechanics : yet it cannot be denied, that the laws of
the Soul are as fixed and orderly as those of Mechanics, and
that they act through mechanical principles in the body. The
same may be said of the Love or Life of Man, which is not to
be explained by Geometry : yet his Love, by and through the
body, operates mechanically.
There is likewise a Providence respecting all things, which
is Infinite in the Infinite, or in the Being who is all-provident,
and which is quite inappreciable by Greometry. There are
probably infinite other things, of which we have no knowledge
whatever, which own no obedience to the known laws of Me-
chanics ; hence we may conclude, that there are things in the
Soul, which arc still far remote fi'om mechanical apprehension :
QOD AND THE PHILOSOPHER. 87
BO that did we even know all the Mechanism and Greometry of
the visible World, there would yet remain infinite things with
which we are miacquainted.
The true philosopher seeks earnestly for the causes of
things, for knowing the causes he becomes the easy master of
effects and details. The mechanical World of Nature is not
unlike a spider's web, and the philosopher may be compared
to the spider herself. The spider in the centre of her web,
by circles and polygons radiating around, knows in an instant
what takes place in the circumference. The philosopher, who
discovers the central law of Nature, will be in Nature as the
spider in her web. From the centre he will view Nature's
infinite peripheries, and comprehend the whole mundane
qrstem at a glance.
Ood and the Philosopher.
^ Without the utmost devotion to the Supreme Being no
one can be a complete and truly learned philosopher. True
philosophy, and contempt of the Deity, are two opposites.
Veneration for the Infinite Being can never be separated
firom philosophy ; for he who fancies himself wise, whilst his
wisdom does not teach him to acknowledge a Divine and
Infinite Being, has not even a particle of wisdom. The
philosopher sees indeed, that God governs the Creation by
rules and mechanical laws, and that the Soul governs the
Body in a similar manner, he may even know what those
rules and mechanical laws are ; but to know the nature of
that Infinite Being, from whom, as from their fountain, all
things in the world derive their existence and subsistence —
to know, I say, the nature of that Suprenie Intelligence with
its infinite arcana, — ^this is an attaiiunent beyond the sphere
of his limited capacity. When therefore the philosopher
has arrived at the end of his studies, even supposing him to
have acquired so complete a knowledge of all mundane
88 THE INFINITE AND NATURE.
^ things, that nothing more remains for him to learn, he must
* there stop ; for he can never know the nature of the Infinite
* Being, of His Supreme Intelligence, Supreme Providence,
* Supreme Love, Supreme Justice, and other infinite attri-
* butes. He will therefore acknowledge that, in respect to
* this supremely intelligent and wise Being, his knowledge is
* nothing. He will hence most profoundly venerate Him with
^ the utmost devotion of Soul ; so that at the mere thought of
^ Him, his whole frame, or membranous and sensitive system,
' will awfully, yet sweetly tremble, from the inmost to the
' outermost principles of its being.'
Ood and Nature.
^ Nature is only a word which expresses the motive forces
^ proceeding from the Infinite. Nature is nothing without the
* World, and the World without Nature ; but the Infinite is
* still Infinite independently of the World : while on the other
* hand no conception can be formed of the World independ-
* ently of the Infinite. They therefore are mere children, and
^ have not reached the first threshold of true philosophy, who
^ ascribe to Nature the origin of all things, and exclude the
^ Infinite, or who confound Nature and the Infinite together,
^ when yet tiie World or Nature is only an effect, a causate
^ or thing caused, the Infinite being its efficient or cause.'
Such is a curt abstract of his preliminary observations.
His purpose, it will be seen, is to bring to light the constitution
and laws of the Elemental World ; to reveal those subtle, in*
visible and inner forces, which are the Soul of Nature, by
which Nature's gross body of Earth is permeated and vivified,
and from which, by condensation. Earth was created.
He tells us that we can know nothing save by Experience,
that no Knowledge can be derived directiy from the Soul, but
only through the Senses ; yet he opens * The Principia ' with
an assertion which he never gathered from Experience.
MATTES DISCOVERED IN ITS BEGINNING. 89
He wishes to prove how the Elemental World began,
and he begs the whole question by assuming that it must
have commenced in a Point.
Nature, he conceives, originated in a Point, which he
defines as the simplest existence, the geometrical Point, the
Point of Zeno. This Point is the beginning of the World,
for it is the beginning of Geometry ; and Geometry is the Uw
and essential attribute of every substance in the World.
The Point is produced immediately from the Infinite. It
is the medium between the Infinite and the Finite, and par-
takes of the nature of both. It may be compared to Janus with
two faces, which look both ways at once, or at each universe.
The Point is pure and total motion ; it is the commence-
ment and the potency of all motion and production. The Point
cannot be conceived of according to any laws of Geometry,
and no attribute can be assigned to it except by analogy.
When geometrically considered the Point is nothing^ or be-
comes a subject of mere imagination.
Motion, as derived from the Point, ever flows from a
centre to a circumference, and around the circumference
back to the centre, and is thus an everlasting spiral. In
speaking in this fashion, he speaks of the Point as manifested
in Nature. As from the Point all the motion, force and being
of Nature commence and are derived, so every atom, and
consequentiy every aggregation of atoms, carries in its heart a
perpetual tendency to vortical motion.
Out of a congress and coacervation of such Points of force
the First Finite is produced. This First Finite we are directed
to think of as a geometrical figure with the fewest of boun-
daries, the most perfect of figures, the first limitation of
substance, and the first occupant of space. In it there are two
natural poles, formed by the spiral motion of the Points, and in
it is an equator with meridians and lesser circles. From its
inherent motion it is necessarily impelled to a revolution on its
axis. The First Finite thus perfectly resembles the World,
90 CREATION IS CAUGHT IN THE ACT.
although it is so small that in comparison with things com-
pounded it is ahnost nothing.
As by the aggregation and coacervation of gyrating
Points the First Finite is formed — so by motion, aggregation
and mutual pressure among First Finites a grosser order of
Second Finites is produced. What the Point is to the First
Finite, the First Finite is to the Second.
Second Finites are said to compose the First Element,
forming the solar vortex, and filling the whole space of the
starry heavens.
From Second Finites are produced Third Finites, in the
same manner as First Finites are from Points, and Second
Finites from First.
Third Finites form the Second, or Magnetic Element.
From Third Finites, in the same way by condensation and
coacervation, are produced Fourth Finites.
Fourth Finites form the Third Element, or Ether.
From Fourth Finites are produced Fifth Finites in the
same way.
Fifth Finites compose the Fourth Element or Air, and in
a state of still closer compression, Water. Water having no
elasticity cannot, however, be regarded as belonging to the
Elemental Eangdom. It is the first purely material Finite.
In a globule of Water is contained all that had previously
existed from the Point downwards, like box within box.
It will thus be readily seen that one Finite stands to its
second as its cause, and in this sense is called its Active.
Actives are then the heart of their Finite ; and the Point within
all, is the heart of hearts. Derived from the Point is an endless
motion by which the whole Elemental World is maintained in
a ceaseless vortical whirl.
Such, according to Swedenborg, is the derivation and pro-
cession of the Elements.
It will be observed, that in tliis procession we have a series
of Actives and Passives, or rather Re-actives. The Point is
MAGNETISM TAKEN TO PROVE THE THEORY. 91
an Active to the First Finite, and the First Finite a Re-active
to the Point ; and the Elements of Magnetism and Ether stand
to one another in the same relation. Throughout Nature
Swedenborg held that there was everywhere Action and Re-
action, and absolute inertia nowhere; that the gross moved
more slowly than the rare, but that tiie rare foimd a fulcrum
for action in tiie gross ; that the gross was moved by the
action of the rare ; and that without Re-action there could be
no Action ; for without a passive continent action would bo
dissipated like steam without a boiler, or the Soul without a
body. Every Active or every force in its turn serves as a
Passive to a higher force ; as, for example, the boiler is passive
to steam, steam to heat, heat to electricity, and electricity to
some force more subtile still, and the highest finite force of all
to the Infinite.
A boiler is a tangibly mechanical Passive ; but Swedenborg
would say that steam, and heat, and electricity are not a whit
less mechanical, although their mechanism eludes our Senses.
For the illustration and confirmation of this theory he turned
to Magnetism ; Magnetism he held to be the Second Element,
and composed of Third Finites.
Peter Van Musschenbroek, Professor of Philosophy and
Mathematics in the University of Utrecht, published at Leyden
in 1729 a work, ' Phystcce Experimentales et Oeometrtcce Dissert
tatianesj^ abounding in magnetic experiments and observations.
These Swedenborg freely transferred to his pages, and used to
prove his doctrine of vortical motion. Musschenbroek con-
sidered, that magnetic attractions and repulsions observed no
certain law ; but here Swedenborg left him, maintaining, that
nowhere was order more demonstrable.
Tins done, and having described the Elemental World in
its leasts, in single Points and Finites, he turns to its description
in the mass, in Suns and Space and Earths. In doing so he
92 HOW THE EARTH WAS CREATED.
repeats what he has written before, for as he tells us, * Nature
* is similar to herself in Suns and Planets as in Particles, size
^ makes no difference.'
The Point was described as containing or receiving the
potency of all motion and production derived fi*om the
Infinite. Suns are the sires of systems, and therefore Suns
consist of Points. From tiiese Points are produced First
Finites, and from First Finites Second Finites, or the First
Element, and from Second Finites Third Finites, or the
Magnetic Element. These First and Second Elements form
the Solar Vortex. Each particle and the whole mass of the
Magnetic Element wheeling in ceaseless gyration, ^ in perpetual
* motion, local or translatory, undulatory or modificatory and
^ ancillary,' closed and thickened in the Third Element or Ether.
The Sun in his Vortex was surrounded by this crust of
Etiier. Subtie and rare though Ether be, yet to the inner
Elements it is coarse ; and, revolving in a continual gyratory
motion round the Sun, it gradually retreated until widening
and widening it became at last so attenuated, that it broke and
collapsed into space and was there fashioned by the soft but
powerful action of the Magnetic Element into a Planet, and
led into its orbit by continuing magnetic bonds.
The Planet of Ether by further condensation became Air ;
and from Air by still further compression was produced Water.
From Water was formed the Mineral Eangdom. Arotmd
globules of Water grew crusts, just as Ether crusted round the
Sun. These crusts gathered tiiemselves between the interstices
of the Water globules, and hence originated Salt.
Salt was the first of the solid formations, the beginning of
the terrestrial series. From Salt, Swedenborg conceived, * by
^ distillation, sublimation, rectification, circulation, filtration,
^ commixtion, digestion, precipitation or crystallization might
^ be educed any substance ;' and indeed was educed the Mineral
Kingdom.
The Mineral Kingdom thus accounted for, the foundation
THE THEORY A MATHEMATICAL DREAM. 93
of the Earth was laid; and by countless changes, and develop-
ment upon development, a gromid for vegetables, and then for
animals, and at last a Paradise were prepared, into which Man,
the king and crown of creation, stepped forth; and all these
wonders were effected through gyrating Points, or the Sun
whose inmost consists of an infinite concourse of such Points.
Such, in mere outline, is Swedenborg's theory of the origin
and order of the mechanical Universe. It would be difficult to
give an idea of the laborious care and minuteness, running
into endless iteration and difiuseness, with which he reasons
out its details. What is to be said about it?
It is a mathematician's ambitious dream. The very begin-
ning of his theory lay in nothingness. The Point by his own
definition was geometrically nothing, a mere figment of the fancy,
and his ratiocination over it makes the head swim. He felt
his difficulty, and candidly expresses his desire to evade it —
^ Since the Point is of such a nature that it must necessarily
^ be contemplated as procee^g from the Infinite, and yet
^ existing before any Finite, and so must be considered as non-
^ geometrical, inasmuch as the Finite is produced by it, like
^ always begetting its like ; I could wish that some other
l person capable of the task would favour us with a better, or
* more just view of the subject. For my own part, I would
^ willingly give up the further consideration of this first ens to
^ which something of Infinity adheres, and proceed to the
' Finites.'*
This was hard ; his Point he was bound to make clear ;
yet after much ado he ends in taking it for granted.
The bland and unconscious way in which the makers of
precepts abandon them in practice is amusingly illustrated by
Swedenborg in his ' Principia.^ He tells us, as we have read,
that all Knowledge is derived through the Senses, and nothing
directly from the Soul; and this assertion stands as the preface
** ' Principiat* chap, ii., No. 19.
94 THE VANITY OP THE DREAM.
to a theorj spun out in all its elaboration from his own Soul.
It is true ho allows, that he is only trying to evolve the
Unseen from the Seen ; and we may follow him when he
says, that as visible Matter is geometrical as to figure, and
mechanical as to motion, invisible Matter must be so likewise ;
for size makes no difference ; but when he proceeds to invent
Elements we listen to him, if we can command the interest,
as we would to a tale of Utopia or of the Fairies. For the
existence of Points and the procession of Finites into the
Elements he has no evidence or experience to adduce whatr
ever. Why Magnetism itself is not composed of Points
* derived immediately from the Infinite ?' and, Why there are
not ninety-two, or twenty-five, or ten layers of Finites between
the Infinite and the Ether? these, and scores of similar ques-
tions might be idly asked, for his only answer could be,
I have assumed whatever I thought requisite for the complete
symmetry of my theory. This, any open-eyed reader of the
^ Principia^ sees ; and Swedenborg himself lived to reject his
mathematical fiction concerning the process and order of
Creation.
Although I anticipate my narrative, yet this seems a fitting
place to quote a passage or two from his later works bearing on
the subject. Writing after he had attained fourscore, he says —
^ The nature and manner of Creation had often engaged
^ my meditations, yet to no purpose ; but aft;er I was admitted
* by the Lord to the Spiritual World I perceived the impossi-
* bility of coming to any true conclusion about the Creation of
* tiie Universe, except it is first known that there are two
^ Worlds, a Spiritual and a Natural, and two Suns, a Spiritual
* and a Natural, by which Suns Creation was effected.'*
Again he observes —
^ Unless an idea be formed of Grod as the primary substance
• * Vera ChriaHana ReUgio,' No. 76, published 1771. Here we have
BDothoT theory widely diffsrent, about which we shall speak in its turn.
THE RECANTATION OF HIS NOTION. 95
^ and foim, the mind is filled with idle fancies As that
^ the Creation of the World originated in Points, and afterwards
^ £rom geometrical lines, which as they are not predicated of
^ any substance, are in fact mere nothings.'*
Again —
^ It is asserted by some, that a substance so simple exists,
^ (say Points for instance), that it is not a form from lesser
^ forms, and that from that substance by coacervation, sub-
^stantiate or composite things exist, and at length those
* substances, which are called Matter. Nevertheless, such a
^ simple substance does not exist ; for what is a substance
^ without a form? It is a thing that nothing can be pre-
'dicated of; and from an entity of which nothing can be
* predicated, nothing can be compounded by coacervation.'f
The following will show how, in after years, he moderated
his notion of the range of Mathematics —
^ The Geometricians think, that nothing can go beyond or
^ rise above their science ; but herein they are much deceived.
*• The action of the intestines, the very lowest and grossest of
^ human functions, altogether baffle geometric apprehension.
^ Geometry is terminated in the circle, or in curves refer-
^ ring themselves to the circle, and does not therefore even
^ compass tilings atrial and aqueous. J£ therefore. Geometry
^ is unequal to these low and easy things, how can it ever
^ attain to the higher ! ever comprehend those subtier organs
* which receive Life I'J
Extracts of like import might be extended; but these
may suffice to prove that Swedenborg rose above his * iVtn-
^ ctpuij which, by its easy *• mathematical method,' makes
^the Creation of a World littie more mysterious than the
^ cooking of a dumpling. '§
• ' Vera CkrittianaBeUgio,* No. 20.
t ' I>e Divino Amore et de Divina SapienHa,^ No. 229, publialied 1768.
t * Diarium SpiriiuaU,' No. 8,483-4, 5th October, 1748.
2 See ' Sartor Buartus,^ page 1 .
96 FOKTUNATB GUESSES IX THE PRIHCIPIA.
The *'Firmciputj amongst its few redden in these days,
has not wanted admirersi who have feond in it anticipations of
many subsequent discoveries. It would be surprising indeed
if a theory of sudi range and dabcwation did not strike out
some speculation, whidi Sdenoe might justify and later
philosophers repeat.
From our abstract it will be seen tfiat something akin to
the famous Nebular Hypothesb is set forth in the assertion,
that the Earths are produced from the condensed efiusions
of the Sun. Laplace, who is cmnmonly credited with the
Nebular Hypothesia, owns that Buffbn first suf^ested to him
the idea of the derivation of Planets and their Moons from
their Suns. Bufibn possessed Swedenborg^s ' Firwc^pia^^ and
it may be presumed read it ; finr his copy widi his antogn^,
^ Bmjimy 1736," cm the title-page, now lies before me, lent to
me by a friend who purchased it from Mr. H. G. Bdm, the
well-known London bookseller.
£ ven for the Point there are people to say something ; some
of our scientific men think, ^ that Matter is resolvable in the
^lasl analysis, not into definite atoms occupying space, but
^ into Points of dvnamic force*' This Mr. Faraday considers
demonstrable, and substantially it is Swedenborg*s notion : the
Pmnt is by him d^^ned as ^ pure and total motion, an ever-
^ lasting force,* and the seed of all thiugs.
That heat and electricity are latent iu all Matter is now
universally admitted. Swedenborg held that heat, li^t and
electricity were but modifications of one Element — the Mag-
netic; and that Magnetism was only one sone in the series
which lay between gyrating Points at the inside, and earths
and metals at the outside. It i» plain then that Magnetism,
aiH\>nring: to his theory, is Utout in all Matter, for it is but one
of the processes by which it exists*
IVriia^vj the most useful and fruitful doctrine of the * PnVi-
* o«/Mii/ is the doctrine of similarity — that Nature is everywhere
the same, in great as in little,— that mxc uuikes no diflference.
SPIRAL MOTION PERVADES CREATION. 97
This truth Swedenborg laid fast hold of and never forgot ; he
used it unsparingly as a truth of miiversal appUcation in things
spiritual as well as natural, and few of his pages can be read
without meeting it, expressed or implied.
Hence in the ^Ptincipia^ his Cosmogony is only a repetition
of his theory of the Point and its Finites ; the Sun becomes a
centre of Points breeding the Elements, which condense into
Earths.
The existence of vortices throughout all Creation is main-
tidned in the ^ Principia ;^ a spiral or vortical motion, he says,
is derived from the Point, and pervades every Finite, and
therefore all aggregates of Finites, whether Elemental or
Material.
The theory of vortices was advocated by Kepler, Descartes,
and Leibnitz ; but it was regarded as exploded by Sir Isaac
Newton's doctrine of attraction.
There is a great difference however between the theory
of vortices as taught by Swedenborg, and by his predecessors.
They supposed atoms and worlds to be inert masses, and, that
Earths were wheeled in their orbits by some extraneous force ;
Swedenborg on the other hand looked on each atom, and,
therefore, on each Earth of atoms, as carrying in its heart the
force of the Point, and as being internally impelled thereby to
perpetual vortical motion. Moreover the spaces between Suns
and Earths were not voids ; but were filled with the Magnetic
Element, which swathed the Earths in its soft bands, and
urged them onward in their spiral ways.
By a Magnet and its sphere Swedenborg would interpret
the Universe. What indeed was the Universe but a great
Magnet? Stars were clustered, and Suns and Earths and
Moons all moved under magnetic laws.
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Fcvfend HcUi. BWbpoL Begi. 17U.
THE INFINITE THE DIFFICULTY OF PHILOSOPHY. 99
^ of relationship. From this three-fold ground, that is to say,
* from veneration for your merits, from acknowledgment of
'your kindness, and from family ties, springs sincere love,
^ which I trust you will permit me here to put on record. As
' it was at your instigation that I applied myself to these
* studies, so I hope you wiU, in a measure, acknowledge tiiis
' offspring of my powers, poor though it be, as In some part
*' your own ; and therefore allow, that of right, it should be
* dedicated to no one but yourself. I claim for it your favour-
' able consideration, if not on its own account, yet, because of
* the cause it pleads ; if not for its merits, yet, for the love you
' bear its author. That your life may be as long and happy
* as those desire, who are your relations by love, — this, and
^ more than this, as I love you more, is the heartfelt wish of,
* Eight Reverend Bishop,
* Your most obedient Servant and dutiful Kinsman,
* Emanuel Swedenborg.'
Hie Infinite, Swedenborg premises, is the Difficulty of
Hiilosophy.
^ As the mind in the course of philosophizing peers into and
* courses over finite Nature, it cannot but at last arrive at the
* utterly unknown and inexplicable, that is, at the Infinite ;
^ and as the Infinite is identical with the Non-fiinite, the mind
^ there stops, — ^there finds an insurmountable and impenetrable
* difficulty, a Grordian Knot.
^ The Philosopher then by a thousand curious efforts labours
^ to know, what the Infinite can be, what the Infinite God is
^ like, what can be the nature of an Essence without end or
^ boundary, and what that something is of the qualities of which
^ Philosophy is doomed to perpetual ignorance ; whether the
' Infinite is identical with the Divine, whether there be aught
* in Nature which can be said to be Infinite, whether the Infinite
* is beyond Nature or not, and whether the qualities of the
* Infinite are to be discovered by means of Nature or not.
H 2
100 THE INFINITE CANNOT BE EVADED.
* For where the mind is not hindered by circumstances or
oppressed with cares, it ever loves to rise and mount on high ;
and the steeper the difficulty, the more heartily the mind
engages with it ; for the mind bums to possess denied know-
ledge, and to tread forbidden ground ; longs, also, to know
secret things, and glories in grappling with difficulty : and the
longer it sticks in the knotty point, provided there is hope
that anything approacliing to knowledge can be won, the
more earnest and burning do its efforts become. The pleasure
of the pursuit lives and feeds upon itself, and dallies with the
labouring soul ; and this continues, until the mind has found
what it sought, or else, in sheer weariness, is forced to leave
it, as hopelessly inexplicable ; although even in this case, it
is not without reluctance, that the Philosopher can consent to
forego his emprise.
^ Hence men perforce will speculate about the Infinite, —
although the more deeply they go the more deeply are they
involved in an impenetrable labyrinth.
^ The Philosopher impatient to solve the difficulty of the
Infinite whets his mind, consults all the oracles of Reason, and
collects a thousand arguments from his Memory.'
Yet it will be at once observed, that the Philosopher, his
lleason, his Memory, and all the powers and knowledge he
can command are Finite, and being Finite, in the nature of the
case, they can make no approach to the Infinite. He may
come indeed to the conclusion, that Nature and Grod are one ;
but that is to deny the Infinite, for Nature is Finite.
^ I will then admit,' he continues, ^ that by no comparison
^ with things seen and finite, and by no similitude, and by no
^ force or faculty of the understanding can we penetrate into
* any thing that is in God, or in His Infinity. I will also go
' further and grant, that not Angels — if the reader believe in
' Angels —can penetrate into the Essence of the Infinity of God.
' Perhaps my reader thinks that Philosophy has no right at
' all to reason upon the Essence and Infinity of God, since such
THE UNIVERSE IS FINITE. 101
* procedure is vain, and leads direct to errors ; and that we ought
* to accept in faith the fact of the Divine Infinity, because taught
* in the Holy Scripture. I confess that this is, in all justice, the
* preferable way, and that Beason may properly be banished
* from mysteries and holy ground ; and moreover, that those
* persons are the happiest to whom by grace it is given to do
* so. Nevertheless, it is impossible to deny that there are vast
* numbers in the philosophical world who have no choice left in
* this matter, but who fall into deep thought on the Divine
* Essence ; for the law of humanity is, that if the mind begins
* to reason, it cannot help going deeper and deeper
^ The human mind has an innate desire to philosophize on the
* unknown, and all the more if God or the Soul, or Salvation
* be under discussion. Every one has not the power to dictate
* the course of his thoughts, and tlie persistency of the Philo-
^ sopher in his search for the Infinite is natural and human.'
The question then is. Whether there be an Infinite, or
not? Whether God be of such a nature, that He can be called
Infinite ?
To narrow the discussion, he asks his reader to accept the
conclusion, *to which Reason assents, that in Nature the
* Infinite is impossible. Nature is composed of Finitcs ; and
* Finites, though midtiplied indefinitely, can never become
* Infinite.
* Some have attempted to make out, that Nature, or the
* Universe is not Finite, but Infinite — that the Heavens are
* illimitable and unending — that the World is eternal and ever-
^ lasting. So thought Aristotle and certain of his followers.
* They fancied, that in this way, they had found a God, who
* was at once Finite and Infinite. They saw that the Uni-
* verse was finite to the senses, but they thought that if they
* took away from it all boundaries, or supposed it circular, or
* in some other way imagined it without end, that they would
* thereby conceive the Infinite. The Infinite, in short, they
' regarded as Space without end, and Time without beginning.
102 THE INFINITE A NECESSITY OF REASON.
Had thoy chosen to reason deeper, they wotdd
have perceived that a Universe of Finites forming an Infinite
God are irreconcilable notions ; for, if you recognize parts in
the Universe, you thereby recognize mere Finites as com-
posing it ; and, if you recognize moments in Time, you do
the same. How then can any number of these Finites be
Infinite? How can a Universe of Finites be
without limits ? Each part has its limits — ^why not the whole ?
Labour as you please to conceive the Finite without boun-
daries, you must yet answer these questions; and, if you
answer truly, your Reason cannot but admit that the Uni-
verse is finite ; for, although your imagination pass through
myriads and myriads of worlds, you still must come to an
end ; and a Universe finite in its parts must needs be finite
as a whole/
Admitting then, that the Universe, Nature, or Creation is
finite, he next inquires. By whom was the Universe created,
caused, or finited ? K it be answered, that Nature created or
originated itself, a reply is made which is flatly repugnant to
Reason ; for that is saying, that it existed before it did exist ;
that it created itself. K it be said, that Grod created Nature,
and God be thought of as finite, the question ia not answered,
but evaded or deferred ; for, if God be finite, we renew our
inquiry and ask. By whom was God finited, created, or caused ?
We have here the child^s question following his instruction,
that God made him — Then, who made Grod ?
Thus driven inwards finom Finite to Finite, fix>m Cause to
Cause, we are at last compelled to stop and own a first and
original Cause, itself un-causcd and un-finite, and therefore
Infinite.
By this process our author extorts the confesaon of the
Infinite, as the Cause and the Creator of the finite Univerae.
Having admitted the Infinite his next lesson is, that we
can never know idWii the Infinite is : that we can do no mote
ikm my the Lofinite is. « Poor fooliah Reason ' has long
THE INFINITE IS INCOMPREHENSIBLE. 103
striren hopelessly to conceive the Infinite by the Finite,
although the mere terms of the case ought to have taught her
a wholesome despair.
♦ The greatert master of leaniing can no moro imagine
^ t€hat the Infinite is than the simplest rustic. If it is said
' that God is like a man or an idol, or like the least or the
' greatest thing, to us, one simile may be grosser than another;
' but to GU>d, the Infinite, one simile is gross as the other. No
' difference in Finites is any difference to the Infinite, for there
^ is no ratio of likeness or unlikeness between the Infinite and
« the Finite.*
His next step he describes —
' Having attained a confession of the Infinite, so that nolene
^volens Reason is obliged to admit a something which is
' utterly unknown, and which never can be resolved by the
^ known, a Being who is properly termed Infinite, let us
' now take this tacit admission and proceed onwards and see
^ whether we can by Reason attain a still more distinct
' acknowledgment, that there is an Infinite God the producer
^ of Nature. Reasoning h priori we have found, that this
^ Unknown Being ei^sts, or, that there is an Infinite. We
^ will now inquire experimentally whether the same conclusion
^ does not become irresistible reasoning, h posteriori.^
In order to do this he adduces a variety of reflections on
the immensity and the order of the Universe, as seen in the
Heavens and the structure of the human body and infers
therefrom the necessary existence of an Infinite Creator and
Designer. He had evidently at this time (1733-4) begun to
grow familiar with anatomy.
In conclusion, he enters into some obscure and difficult
reasoning about a neamsj or medium of coimection between
the Infinite and the Finite, between God and His Creation.
The Infinite was the cause of the Finite ; but the Finite is
perfectly distinct from the Infinite : Creation iBfrom God ; but
nothing of God is in Creation. Creation moreover is not a
104 THE BRIDGE BETWEEN INFINITE AND FINITE.
work done and abandoned ; but a work in constant progress
and renewal : maintained in every atom of its existence by a
perpetual efflux from the Infinite. How then is the chasm
between the Infinite and the Finite bridged over? How is
Nature adjoined to God?
^ Without a nexus the Finite could neither exist nor subnst.
^ Unless the First Finites were related to the Infinite by a
' nexua of some kind they would be at once annihilated, and
^ the Universe dissipated outright.*
In ^ The Principia'* we noticed, that he selected Points for
this office of mediation between the Infinite and the Finite :
^ like Janus looking both ways.' Now he is less positive and
in perplexity, directing his attention 'at one time to the
' Infinite, and at another to the First Finite, hoping to discover
' the nexus from the latter though not from the former, and
' standing hardly knowing which road to take between some
' light and more darkness.'
This conclusion is at last attained —
' The nexus is affirmed, but it is not known, we declare its
' certain existence, but pretend to no knowledge of its qualities.
' The nexus is Infinite and equally unknown as the Infinite itself.'
This was discouraging. Evidentiy his next duty was to
evolve finom his Reason a nexus between the unknown Infinite
nexus and the Finite. Strangely enough he elects Jesus Christ
to the office of the nexus between the Infinite and the First
Finites I His idea was, that —
' Where Reason is perplexed in her apprehensions recourse
' must at once be had to Revelation ; and when Revelation
' gives us no answer we must fly to the oracle of Reason. In
' this way. Natural Theology must proffer her hand to Revealed,
' when the meanmg of Revelation seems doubtful ; and Re-
^vealed Theology must lend her idd in turn, to Rational
^ Theology, when Reason is in straits.'
His Reason being in straits then about the nexus^ be flies
to Bttvdation, and this is his deliverance —
INTERCOURSE OF SOUL AND BODY. 106
^ Let 118 now see whether God Himself has not been pleieised
to reveal to us this very thing ; for He tells us, that He had,
firom Eternity, an only begotten Son, and, that this only
begotten Son is Infinite and is God, and, that the connection
between the Finite and the Infinite is effected by the only
b^otten Infinite Son and Grod ; and that the Father and Son
are one God,. both Infinite, both the Creator of the Finite
Universe, that both concurred in the work of Creation, yet
that the two are so distinct, that the one is the Father and
the other the Son, the one the first Person, the other the
second ; wherefore in respect to the names of Father and
Son, and in respect to the word Person, they are indeed two,
but in Infinity and Divinity, they are one and the same. In
this way we have here something, like what Reason had
dictated, to wit, the existence of a nexusj between the Finite
and the Infinite; also, the declaration, that the final cause
belongs to the Infinite, but through the neams of the Son ;
and, that the coimection between the Infinite and the Finite
is through the Son and through nothing else. Thus, then
we have a concurrence of Revelation and Reason in the
matter of the nexus.
^ For the present then, let us rest content in the certainty,
that through the only begotten Son of God, the First Finites
are connected with the Last, and both with God«'
The very title of the second part of the treatise before us,
* The Mechanism of the Intercourse between the Soul and the
* Body,' indicates a piece of thorough Materialism.
He first decides, that the Soul is not Infinite inasmuch as
it is not God, but created by God ; and not being Infinite, it
must be Finite, and being Finite, it must therefore be included
somewhere in that Universe, which commencing in Points,
ends in Earth.
The Soul being Finite must have extension, *for the
' Finite is not conceivable apart from extension
106 THS SOUL TH£ INMOST OP THE BODY.
' I do not care how small a Unite may be, it must occupy
^spaoe.
^ In all objects perceived by the Senses, there are none,
' which do not come under the empire of (Geometry and Me-
« chanics; and as aU things which are gross enough to be seen
^ are derived by condensation and coacervation from the sub-
^ tile, inner Elements, we have every right to condude, that
^ the same laws which govern in the lowest, govern in the
^ highest. It is in fact a mere question of size ; because par-
^ tides are so minute as to elude our eyes is no reason why
^ they should elude the laws of G^metry and Mechanics : it
^ has been settled, that size makes no difference, for. Do we
^ not behold the same Mechanism in the trunk of a fly and an
* elephant?'
By this reasoning he catches the Soul in the net of the
Finite and the Material, and discourses over it geometrically
and mechanically.
^ The Soul is in Nature and was sent into Nature by Gk)d.
^ It admits of being endosed within the Finite, that
^ is, within the Body It is dear frt>m experience,
^ altogether apart frt)m reasoning, that the Soul is a constituent
^ of the Body, limited to it, and one of the Body's natural
^ parts The Soul is natural or physical It is
^ the last and subtilest part of the Body.
* The Soul dweUs in no particular gland, in no particuhir
^ membrane, nor is it difiused all over the Body. The Soul's
^ dwelling-place is where the membranes pass into their highest
^ attenuations and reach their finest subtilty The seat
^ of the Rational Soul is in the Brain and does not extend
^beyond it. The Soul resides particularly in the cortical
^ substance of the cerebrum, and partly also in the medullary
^ where exquisitely fine membranes run fix>m partide to
* partide, and above, around and within each partide. The
^ Soul ia ubiquitous in all parts of the Brain.'
Between his Soul and his Body of flesh, blood and bones,
DIFFICULTIES OP THE THEORY. 107
Man comprises all the Elements, which lie between the Son
and the Earth : by his Soul he is kin to the Sun, by his Body
to the Earth* By vibrations all influences from without
ascend through the Senses, by the graduated Elements, to the
Soul. ^ Such vibratory or tremulous motion is the cause of
^ all sensation.' Down the same ways by vibrations the Soul
from her centre issues her mandates to the Body.
Such was Swedenborg^s theory of ^ the Mechanism of the
^ Intercourse between the Soul and the Body.' He had too
much good sense not to feel its defects ; but one of the vices of
his mind was an impatience of uncertainty, and to attain a
fully rounded doctrine he was far too ready to cover the
unknown with theory, evolved from very imperfect data of
the known.
To reach the Soul, and discover what it was, had become
his consuming desire —
« The Sdences are diving continuaUy deeper and deeper
^into the mysteries of Nature, and continually detecting
^correspondences between the grosser and finer substances
* of the World. Why should we not press inwards to a
^ knowledge of the Soul ? so as to forestal our posterity and
^ prevent them laughing at us, as we ourselves now laugh at
^ some of the old philosophers.'
That he had his doubts about his theory is evident from
several expressions. He naturally felt, that —
^ I£ the Soul be mechanical and geometrical it may be
^difficult to explain many of its faculties; as Imagination,
^ Perception, Beason, Memory, Ideas, &c.'
Difficult, indeed ! He meets his doubt in this suggestion :
^ Why may not mechanical laws exist in a superlative per-
^fection adequate to these offices?' — and promises, ^that, in
^a work to which this essay is only preliminary, we shall
Vdemonstrate, that the Soul is perfectly mechanical, and, that
^ it is immortal and cannot perish unless the Universe itself be
^ annihilated.'
108 CHANGE AND UNCERTAINTY OP MIND.
In the introduction to ^ The Principia^ published in the
former year (1733), Swedenborg had said, that —
^ In respect to the Soul and its various faculties, I do not
conceive it possible that they can be explained or compre-
hended by any of the known laws of motion. Such, indeed,
is our present state of ignorance, that we know not whether
the motions by which the Soul operates on the organs of
the Body are reducible under any law or rule, either similar
or dissimilar to those of Mechanism.'
Now (in 1734) he has come to another conclusion —
^ The Soul is subject to mechanical and geometrical laws.
^ As it is impossible to conceive any finite existence without
^ extension, or extension without form, or extension and form
* together, when motion is performed without mechanism ; or
' mechanism without figure ; so I am utterly at a loss to know,
* how it can be shown, that there are other rules or laws of
^ Nature beyond those that are geometrical and mechanical.'
Yet he did not close the lid of the geometrical box upon
the Soul without misgivings—
* If any one can point out to me — I will not insist upon
* demonstration — ^but if any one can point out, how any other
^than geometrical and mechanical laws are possible in our
* finite Creation, I will cede the whole argument. As, however,
* it is impossible to conceive any finite existence without ex-
^ tension, and extension without form, and extension and form
* together with motion devoid of mechanism, so I am utteriy
^ at a loss to know how the Soul can exist save as a subject of
* Greometry and Mechanics He who denies extension
^ to the Soul, denies that the Soul is finite.'
Deeper in the mud-holes of Materialism he could scarcely
go. The year he had spent in Germany, reading and com-
muning with Wolf and his set, had hurried him into positions
from which his own good sense had saved him when writing
^The Principia* at home in Stockholm. Now he thinks every-
thing, which is not God, everything created by the Infinite,
PROMISES OF MEW TREATISES. 109
inaBmuch as it is Finite, must needs be material, possess length,
breadth and thickness, and exist mider the rule of Geometry
and Mechanics. Afflicted with an itch for simplicity, he gains
his end by reducing the Universe to one common stuff called
Matter, thin at the centre in Suns and Souls, and thick at the
outside in Earths and Metals.
We may pity, or smile at these attempts of Swedenborg
to conjure the secrets of Creation out of his Eeason ; but he
tried to do no more than whole regiments of Philosophers
ancient, modem and contemporary ; but happy beyond most
of them was he, for he escaped from his geometrical and
mechanical delusion, and cursed it in a way I need not here
repeat.
We have noticed, that Swedenborg speaks of this book on
* The Infinite^ as * an essay merely preliminary to a work in
* which I will prove, that the Soul is perfectly mechanical^ and
^ that it is immortal;^ and in several places he repeats the
promise telling us in one instance, that he ^ designs to speak
^ more at length of the Soul in the Body in special treatise^
* the purpose of which will be to demonstrate the immortality
* of the Soul to the very Senses.'
To discover then the Soul in the Body he betook himself
with all his vigour to the study of Anatomy and Physiology :
with what results we shall presently see.
In 1745, ten years after this, he printed a work in London
on * The Worship and Love of Qod, It is mentioned now,
because from internal evidence it appears to have been written
about this time ; and because when speaking of Christ as the
neacus between God and Nature in the book before us, he
remarks, ^ We shall have more to say on this head when, in
^ pursuance of our present plan, we come to speak of Divine
* Worship,^*
♦ Chapter i., Section xiv. at the end.
( no )
CHAPTER XL
THE DEATH OF BISHOP 8VEDBERG.
Bight glad was the old Bishop to receive his son back from
Germany, a recognized Philosopher, His memory had grown
treacherous, his nerves tremulous, but his eyes never needed
spectacles, and he beheld with a proud joy the handsome
volumes of the * Opera Phtloaophica et Mineralia^^ printed at
a Duke's cost, and fumbled through the leaves for the pictures,
chief among which was his own EmanuePs portrait. The hour
of his release from the business of this world was at hand, but
in EmanuePs honours there was a sweet satisfaction over which
he could sleep and wake in delight.
In words which I have already in part quoted, Svedberg
thus expresses his comfort in his son up to the ripe age of
forty —
^ Emanuel, my son's name, signifies ^^ God with ua,'^ a
^ name which should constantly remind him of the nearness of
^ God, and of that interior, holy, and mysterious connection
^ in which, through faith, we stand with our good and gracious
^ God : and blessed be the Lord's name ! God has to this hour
* been with him, and may God further be with him, until he is
* eternally united with Him in His Kingdom V
The Autobiography from which this passage is taken,*
* Besides sereral others which have heen absorbed in the coarse of tho
narrative. Copies of the Autobiography exist to this day, in manuscript, in
Sweden ; and it is to be hoped that a work so characteristic and amusing may
soon find an editor and a printer. In the preparation of this account of Biabop
Sredberg, I have been greatly indebted for information to his Memoir in a
Swedish Biographical Cyclop«dia— * Biograpki$kt Lexicon dfver Aamidhmittpe
Svenska Mdn.' Upsala, 1849.
BISHOP SYEDBERQ'S FUNERAL. Ill
was composed by the Bishop when he was between seventy-six
and seventy-nine years old, from 1729 to 1732. With his own
hand he made six copieS| in folios of one hmidred and sixty
pages, as he says, ^ with good intention and in a fatherly spirit,'
and dedicated them with his nsaal sublime self-assnrance, ^ to
<my children and posterity as an example how to conduct
^ themsdvea after my death.'
In 1734, December 17th, the Imperial Academy of Sciences
of St Petersburg elected Swedenborg a corresponding Member.
On the 26th of July, 1735, Bishop Svedberg died at the
age of eighty-two, having ruled in the diocese of Skara for
thirty-three years. His body was placed in a vault, he had
set apart in the cloister church of Yamhem, and over the door
of which he had placed an oval stone with this inscription —
BISKOPENS
DOCTOR JESPER 6VEDBERGS
OCH DESS K. HUSTRU8
FRU SARA SVEDENBORGS
HVILO-RUM
A : D 1720.
Which being interpreted, reads —
BISHOP
DOCTOR JESPER SVEDBERG
AND HIS BELOVED WIFE
MRS. SARA SVEDENBORG'S
RESTING-PLACE
A. D. 1720.
The managing man had so far back as the year 1718
written out precise and ample directions for his funeral.
^ There is to be no fuss made about my corpse ; the Masters
* of Arts and the Clergy of the vicinity are to bear it from my
' house to the grave, and if they grow tired the parishioners wUl
^ relieve them. The funeral will take place by daylight, so
^ that there may be no need for flambeaux or torches ; the
112 svedberg's character.
ftmeral sermon will be taken £rom the text — ^ I believe in the
^ communion of Saints, the remission of sins, the resurrection
^ of the body, and life everlasting. Amen.' Music and organ
will be silent, and only the hymn — ' I know I shall again
^ arise' — sung at the end. Meat and drink will be abundantly
provided for the invited guests, and the remnants of the feast
distributed among the poor of Asaka and Saranaka. The
funeral memoirs, written by myself, will be read before the
sermon.'
Thus closed the long life of the bu^ Bishop, a man
spiritual and worldly, liberal and intolerant, generous and
grasping, lively and serious, and in all things restless and
aggressive. Entertaining it likely was to meet Svedberg once
in a while, and hear the rattle of his audacious tongue, and
enter into the bustle of his doings; but to be associated with him
permanently, must indeed have been weariness to the flesh of
all whose ways were not as his ways. To the health of his
enemies, who he reckoned many, he used to drink ; but it is
easier to imagine, that he was disliked as * a bore,' as an in-
truder into matters beyond his pale, and as an upsetter of
comfortable routine, than, that he was seriously hated as a foe.
On the same ground we should suppose that he was liked by
his admirers rather than reverenced or loved. There was not
stillness enough in him to afford leisure for friendship, and his
three mercantile marriages prove, that his sensibilities were of
a very coarse texture.
Music was a passion with Svedberg. We read, that one
Peter Hesselius, a clergyman, was used to spend his evenings
with his violin and flute at the Bishop's fireside, and wile away
the hours with their favourite tunes. ^Heaven,' said Svedberg,
^ is the land of music There all motions are melodies. When
^ I hear the roar of the waterfalls and the clatter of the
^ mills, they bring to mind the constant harmonies I shall
^ enjoy when I ascend to my eternal home and abide with the
^Angels.'
BISHOP SYEDBBBG'S CHARACTER. 113
Pecnliurly notable in Svedberg was his omnipresent self-
esteem ; in all liis aflfairs the Lord was on his side, and the
Devil on his adversary's. In that conviction lay the secret of
his pertinadty, his mnoete^ and his perpetual activity. He
never saw himself as others saw him ; hence he felt none of
that timidity, which afflicts those who can see themselves out
of their neighbour's eyes. His frankness was not sincerity so
mach as ignorance of the eflSBct of his words. Ddness of this sort
is a qualification for a certain order of worldly success. Men
who are dead to the thoughts and feelings of others concerning
them, uid supremely satisfied with their own rightness, can
drive their measures through society in a style utterly im-
possible to sensitive organizations. It is plain, that was
Svedberg^s case. Indifferent, because dead, to unspoken
opinion, he was able to work incessantly without being be-
wildered by a doubt or troubled with a fear. Direct resistance
in speech and action alone affected him, and he was satisfied if
his imperious wishes were obeyed without taking any heed of
the motives finom which obedience was yielded.
Varied by culture, circumstance, and direction, we shall
observe in Emanuel Swcdenborg an essential repetition of his
fiuher's mind.
Bishop Svedberg left a considerable fortune. Swedcnborg^s
share, added to what he had inherited from his step-mother,
placed him in independence, and set him free to pursue his
studies. In the following year he therefore found a substitute
for his Assessorship, and to him resigned the half of his salary
c{ 1,200 dalers, and set off for the Continent in order to study
Anatomy and Physiology, and print his promised books. A
daler in 1736 was worth about ninepence, and his official
income transmuted into English coin came to £44 8s, lOd.]
t sum which, it is almost needless to remark, had in Sweden
more than a hundred years ago a value that £44 8s. lOd.
very distantly represents.
( 114 )
CHAPTER XII.
SEVEN YEARS OF TRAVEL AND OF PHYSIOLOGICAL
STUDIES.
* On the Ist of July, 1736,' says Swedenborg in a journal,*
' I received permission from our most august King, to enter
* upon a journey into foreign parts for the space of three or
^ four years, that I might compose and publish some literary
* work.
* On the 3rd of July I had the honour of an interview with
^ the King and Queen, who most graciously received me in
* the palace of Carlberg. Between the 3rd and 10th of the
^ month I saluted the Councilors of the Kingdom, and on the
* 9th I took leave of the Assessors of the College.' On the
10th he set out.
He first sailed to Denmark, and on the voyage encountered
a tempest which lasted three days. In Copenhagen he spent
about a week, then went to Hamburg, and then into Hanover
and Holland arriving in Amsterdam where he ^ saw many
* friends. The entire city aspires after nothing but gain.' In
Kotterdam he came into the midst of a fair and after some
notes on the amusements of the people, mountebanks, and
shows he makes these reflections on the prosperity of the
Dutch.
^ Here at Rotterdam, it has suggested itself to me to in-
* This joarnal was written in Swedish, and what portions exist were
translated into Latin hy Dr. Kahl, and printed by Dr. Tafel. ' E. Swedenhorgu
* Itinerarium ex opcribvs ejus posthumia in Museo Academtas Begia HoUnienm
^ Asservatis. StuUgardicc ajnid Ehner el Seuhert. 1814.' Onr extracts are
made from this translation.
SWEDEKBORQ ON THE DUTCH. 115
^ quire why it is that God has blessed a people so barbarous
' and boorish as the Dutch, with such a fertile and luxuriant
^ soil ; that He has preserved them, for so long a course of
' years, from all misfortune ; that He has raised them up in
^ commerce above all other nations ; and made their provinces
' the mart and emporium of the wealtli of Europe and the
^ world. On consideration, the first and principal cause of
^ these circumstances appears to be, that Holland is a republic,
^ which form of government is more pleasing to God than an
* absolute monarchy. In a republic, no veneration or worship
^ Is paid to any man, but the highest and lowest think them-
^ selves equal to kings and emperors ; as may be seen from the
' characteristic bearing of every one in Holland. The only one
* whom they worship is God. And when God alone is wor-
*' sliipped, and men are not adored instead of Hun, such worship
*' is most acceptable to Him.
* Then again, in Holland, there is the greatest liberty.
^ None are slaves, but all are as lords and masters under the
^ government of tlie most high God ; and the consequence is,
^ that they do not repress their manliness either by shame or
^ fear, but always preserve a fiiin and sound mind in a sound
^ body ; and with a free spirit, and an erect countenance, com-
* mit themselves and their property to God, Who alone ought
^ to govern all things. It is not so in absolute monarchies,
^ where men are educated to simulation and dissimulation;
^ where they learn to have one thing concealed in the breast,
*and to bring forth another upon the tongue; where their
^ minds, by inveterate custom, become so false and counterfeit,
' that in Divine worship itself, their words differ from their
^ thoughts, and they proffer their flattery and deceit to God
^ Himself, which certainly must be most displeasing to Him.
* These seem to be tlie reasons why the Dutch are more
' pro^rons in their undertakings than other nations. Their
' worshipping Mammon, however, as a Deity, and caring for
' uothing but gold, is a thing not compatible witli long pros-
i2
I.
116 HOLLAND AND FRANCE.
* perity ; yet perhaps there are ten in a thousand, or in ten
* thousand, who avert the punishment, and cause the rest to
* participate with them in the abimdance and blessings of
* this Ufe.'
From Rotterdam he went to Antwerp, and thence to
Brussels and other towns of Belgium. On his journey finom
Antwerp to Brussels by trekschuit (the river boat of the
Netherlands), he had among his fellow-passengers two bare-
foot Franciscan friars, one of whom stood on a spot for four
hours, praying devoutly all the time ; upon which he remarks :
This custom of praying is doubtless well pleasing to God, if
it proceed from a true and faithful veneration, and from a
pure mind, and not from simulation and hypocrisy, as with
the Pharisees. Prayer avails much, as we know from the
instance of Moses when his people was rebellious, as well as
from other examples. Paul was also desirous that others
should pray for him.'
On the 1st September he came to * Roye in Picardy, a
miserable town. The monks are fat and voluptuous, and an
army of such fellows might be banisl^ed without loss to the
state. They fill their bellies, take all they can get, and give
the poor nothing but fine words and blessings ; and yet they
are willing to take from the poor all their substance for
nothing. What is the good of barefoot Franciscans ?'
On the 3rd of September he arrived in Paris, and took up
his abode in the Hamburg Hotel. In Paris he remained for a
year and a half, during the last four months of 1736, tlie whole
of 1737, and 1738 to the 12th of March. This was Swedenborg's
second visit to Paris; in 1712-13 he had spent a year there.
' 4th Sept. — I saw the city around the Faubourg St. Grer-
' main, was in Notre Dame, the garden of the Luxembourg,
' and at the theatre. The Parisians carry pleasure, or rather
< sensuality to its highest pitch.
' 5th Sept, — I have been in the King's palaces, the Tuileries
' and the Louvre, where I admired the statues of great, noble,
SIGHT-SEEING IN PARIS. 117
* and renowned men. . I was also in the Hotel Royal des In-
* valides, which is a miracle of architecture, a temple of beauty !
* In the way I saw many grand houses.
* 13«A %>^— Was at the Italian Comedy.
* 14ih Sept. — Have been to the Opera, which is niagniii-
* cent ; to the Chamber of Printers and Booksellers, and to
* the Comedy.
* 18rt Sept. — Was in the Palace and its garden, in the
^chmrches of the Franciscans and Cistercians, and to the
* Italian Comedy. I had some controversy with an Abb6
' about the worship of the Saints. He utterly denied that
* they were worshipped, contending that worship was solely
^ rendered to Qodj veneration to Saints, and double veneration
^ to the Virgin Mary.
' 28<A Sept — Was at the Opera, and saw excellent acting
' and dandng.
^2juL Oct. — I have removed my lodging to La Rue
^d^Obaervatoire, opposite the Cordeliers.
* 3rd Oct. — Was at the Church of the Cordeliers, and to
^ their Convent, which is a magnificent house.
' 10th Oct. — It is reckoned tliat the tax called the tenths
* yields annoally 32,000,000, and that the Parisians spend two
^ tfairda of this sum over their own city. In the remote
^provinces of the kingdom the impost is not fairly paid,
^because the people make false returns. One fifth of the
' whole of France is in the hands of the Church. If this con-
* dition of things lasts long, the ruin of the empire is certain.
* 1 7th Oct. — ^I have been to the Opera at the Palais Royal,
*' where a charming piece was performed. The best dancers
^are Halter and Desmoulins. Among the actresses most
^ praised are Madame Breton and Madame Mariette ; among
^ the actors, Fribaud and Fel ; among the singers, Pellecier
^ and Antier.
^ I was also at the Sorbonne, hearing a theological debate.
^ OcL 30lA.— I was at the Church of the Theatins at Port
118 LIFE IS PARIS.
^ Royal, and at the Church of the Augi^tins at the Tuilenes,
^ where Gaillaume, preacher to the King, deUvered a sermon
*" like an actor in a play, in a most artificial manner.
^ Nov. 3. — I was at the palace where the Parliaments are
^ held, and one is now commencing its sittings. In the large
^ Hall of Assembly is a very beantiftd picture ; many candles
*' were lit, and the place was filled with most exqainte mosic.
*• The nobles were robed in purple. The iHshop presided in his
^ sacred garments.
^ I went to St. Chapelle, which St. Louis built in 1245,
^ now open. The two tables of the altar are painted in en-
^ caustic, one representing Christ crucified, and the other His
^resurrection. Around are many smaller pictures of great
^ value. Among the relics shewn is a fragment of the cross,
^ a thorn firom the crown of thorns, the spear, the sponge,
*" and other things purchased at great cost, and brought firom
^ Constantinople.
* Jan. 1, 1737, — I have been at St. Genevieve's. Gene-
^ vi^ve \a the patron saint of Paris.*
And so on, day after day was passed during the first
months of this Parisian residence. Swedenborg was plainly
an active sight-seer, with an omnivorous curioaty. His
journal cont^dns few opinions, and b little more than a catalogue
of sights. ^Vho were his firiends, what men of learning he
visited, he does not tell, and with the exceptioa of the visit
to St Grenevi^ve on New Year's-day, to St. Denis on the
23rd of January, and to the village of Poissy on the 30th of
July, the whole of 1737, and 173S to the 12th March, is, in
his journal, a blank.
Ou the 12th of March, he left Paris for Italy by way of
Mficon and Lyons. At Lyons he spent some days inspecting
the city and its manufactories. After a tedious and dangerous
journey across the Alps he reached Turin, through whose
streets as he entered passed a proces^on of monks bearing
lighted candles.
ITALIAN TRAVELS. 119
' 4th ApriL — I was at the Chapel Royal and heard sweet
^ niiisic sung by eunuchs. I saw the King and Queen.^
From Turin he went to Milan, and on the way his guide
proved to be a robber. He threatened Swedenborg with his
dagger, who managed to convince him, that he had no money,
and that his murder would be a profitless crime.
Having viewed Milan, he passed on to Venice, where he
remained from April to August. We read —
^ 9ik August. — ^When I had finished my work I went again
^ to Pavia, and thence to Vicenza and Verona.'
I presume this refers to the completion of his work on
^ The Economy of ike Animal Kingdom,^
Mantua, Ferrara, Bologna, Florence, Pisa and Siena were
next visited, and on the evening of the 25th of September
Swedenborg entered Rome by the Flaminian way and through
the People's Gate.
In Rome he remained until the 15th of February, 1739,
or four and a half months. His journal, like that kept in
Paris, consists of a mere list of the sights of Rome, with here
and there a note of admiration over some picture, statue, or
palace. His lodging was near the house where Christina of
Sweden abode and died, and he records —
'30^ Jan, — I was where lived Christina, Queen of
^Sweden. From the garden is seen the whole city, St.
* Peter's, and the surrounding country.'
It has been said, that Swedenborg published at Rome in
1740 * A Dissertation on the Nervous Fibre and ike Nervous
^ Fluid ;^ but of the work no trace can be found. It is likely
mne blunder has been made, though, as Dr. Wilkinson
wnarka, the title bears a Swcdenborgian aspect.
Swedenborg's presence in Rome set the Cardinals thinking
ibout him and his writings; and the result was, that the
' Opera PhUosophiea et Mineralia ' was honoured with a place
in the ^ Index Expurgatorius^' in 1739.
In his journal Swedenborg does not mention the Pope.
120 ROME, FLORENCE, GENOA.
It is likely he did not see Clement XIL, who then filled the
papal chair, for he was an old man, worn out and blind. He
had been elected Pope in 1730 at the age of seventy-eight,
full of infirmities, as a brief respite to conflicting claims ; but
he lived to rule wisely and well for ten years, rather longer
than intended, when he was succeeded by Benedict XIV.
We shall hear something from Swedenborg about both of
these Popes anon.
From Rome he returned to Florence, where he had the
pleasure of spending two hours in conversation with the Grand
Duke and Duchess, then he went to Leghorn, and thenoe to
Grenoa, where his journal concludes with these entries —
* 17/^ March^ 1739. — I have come to Oenoa, ^ich has an
^excellent harbour, superb palaces, and a senate4iou8e the
^ most splendid imaginable, in which is a picture of Christopher
^ Columbus, so livingly painted, that I could conceive nothing
' more perfect.
^ I saw the Doge dressed in red to the shoes, and the
* Nobles, who are eight hundred, all in black with little tippets,
* and with noses and faces like apes.
^ I was in a most pleasant garden, which now in the middle
^ of March is in high bloom, oranges and dtrons are ripening,
^ olives are gathered from the trees, Pomona is bringing her
^ harvest.*
After this date we are without record of Swedenboif^'s
goings. In 1740-41 he must have been at Amsterdam, for
there he printed his ^ Economy of the Animal Kingdom,^ In
1 740 he was likely at Leipsic, for there appeared ten Latin
verses from his pen celebrating the third centenary of the art
of printing. It is probable he went home to Stockholm in
1741, for we know he returned to Holland from Sweden in
the summer of 1743, and at the Hague published Parts I.
and II. of his ' Animal Kingdom.^ In 1744 he left Holland
for London, where in 1745 he published Part III. of his
' Animal Kingdom ' and his * Worship amd Love of Ood.^
SWEDENBORO'S WOBK WHEH ABROAD. 121
ThiB is a very mengre summary of seven years, but there
is nothing more known from the summer of 1736 to the
summer of 1743; to the latter date we shall recur by and bye.
From the mass of writmg he produced m these years, we con-
clude that he spent his time in the study of the works of the
best Anatomists, attended lectures, and got into dissecting
rooms whenever he had an opportunity. In his ^ Itinerary*
he makes very few references to his studies. On the 21st of
July, 1736, he notes that he is reading and making extracts
finom WolTs ^ Cosmology* and ^ Ontology.^ On the 6th of Sep-
tember, in Paris, we find him meditating a treatise to prove
that * The Soul of Wisdom lies in the acknowledgment and
^knowledge of the Deity;' and on the next day a second
treatise, setting forth, that ' It is now time to proceed from facts
*to the exploration of Nature.' On the 10th and 11th of
September he states, that he is working at the outlines of a book,
^ De annt gentrt^ the nature of which, from the title, it is
difficult to make out; literally it means, ^ On the Kind or Nature
*' of the yecoTj'* and has been supposed to be a work on the settle-
ment of the question respecting the new and old style of the
CSalendar. At this time he was still pondering on the subjects
treated in his ^ iVtVtctpta,' for on the 4th of October, recording
i visit to the gardens of the Tuileries, he adds, ^ my walk was
* exceedingly pleasant to-day ; I was meditating on the forms of
' the particles of the atmospheres.' With the notice of the com-
pletion of his work at Venice, 9th August, 1738, these comprise
aD the references to his literary labours in his ' Itinerary.^
There is an anecdote referring to this time in Sweden-
iNirg's life, which may be mentioned. When he was an old
Bum General Tuxen asked him. Why he did not wed with
Emerentia Polhem, and he frankly answered, ^^ She would
^not have me." Tuxen then ventured to inquire. Whether
in his youth he had been indifierent to women ? Swedenborg
replied, ^ Not altogether. In my youth I had a Mistress in
^ Italy."
i
122 THE ITALIAN MISTRESS.
When in Italy he was fifty-two years old, not an age
usually spoken of as that of youth ; but at the time the con-
fession was made he was eighty, and looking down through
thirty long years, fifty might perhaps appear as the time of
youth.
We have already mentioilbd a similar connection spoken
of by Robsahm,* who relates —
^ It is well known that Swedenborg in his youth had a
^ Mistress, whom he left because she was false to }nm. Besides
^ this there cannot be found in his life any trace of a disorderly
* love.'t
No doubt Bobsahm refers to his life in Stockholm and not
in Italy. It may have been that Swedenborg was misunder-
stood by General Tuxen, and that ^ Italy' was supplied by
his imagination. Yet there is fair cause for belief in both
Mistresses. The confession to Tuxen was not exhaustive, and
Robsahm did not know everything. Moreover the Italian
Mistress is more credible after the Stockholm one, even as die
chances of marriage are greater with widowers than bachelors.
Let us now look over the books which Swedenborg has
printed.
* M. Robsahm, Director of the Bank of Stockholm, became intimato
with Swedenborg towards the close of his life, and after his death pablished
a pamphlet, consisting of a number of interesting particulars descriptiye of
Swedenborg'B life and conrersation. Robsahm's anecdotes hare been oAea
printed, but the English versions are usually more or less garbled. I shall
often quote Robsabm as saying this or that, and let this reference to him as
an authority suffice.
t See Dr. Tafel's * Sammlung von Urkunden betreffend da$ Leben und den
• Chara€ier JSnum, 8wedenbarg'$. AUMeilunff III.,* p. 20.
( 123 )
CHAPTER XIII.
TUE ECONOMY OF THE ANIMAL KINGDOM *
It will be remembered, that Swedenborg arrived at the
oondusiony that the Soul was an immortal machine consisting
of the inmost and subtilest parts of the Body. In order that
be might discover the Soul in its fastnesses he resolved to
pieroe the Bodj from the outside, membrane by membrane.
Thin resolve he recorded in 1734, and in 1741, after seven years
of search, he gave the world the results in two volumes,
entitled ^ 7%6 Economy of the Animal Kingdom,^
By the Animal Kingdom Swedenborg did not refer to the
Kingdom of Animals, but to Man only, Man being the sum-
mary of all Animals : as he remarks —
^ Man did not begin to exist until the Kingdoms of Nature
' were completed ; and then, the world of Nature concentrated
* itself in him at his creation. Thus in Man, the microcosm,
* the whole Universe may be contemplated from the beginning
^ to the end, from first to last.'
In pursuit of the Soul through the Body he sets before us
a aeries of articles on —
^ The Composition and Genuine Essence of the Blood.
** CEeomomia Begni Ammali$ in Transactianes divita: quorum hcBc prima
'& Sampdne, tjui Arterii$t Veni$ et Corde agit: Anatomice^ Physice et PhUo-
'wfhiee perimitrata. Oui aooedU Introductio €id PiBychologiam Bationalem.
^AmUdodamif Apud Frandteum Changuion, 1741.
' (Eeonontia Begni Animalis in Tramactiones divita: quorum here $ecunda
''kOtrtbri Mota et Cortice tt de Anima Humana agit: Anatomies, Physice
' ^ PhUceepkiet perhuiraia. Amatelodamiy Francitcum Changuian^ 1741.'
124 CONTENTS OF THE WORK.
^ The Arteries and Veins, their Tunics and the Circulation
* of the Blood.
^ On the formation of the Chick in the Egg ; and on the
^ Arteries, Veins and Rudiments of the Heart
^ On the Circulation of the Blood in the Foetus ; and on
^ the Foramen Ovale and Ductus Arteriosus belonging to the
^ Heart in Embiyos and Infants.
* The Heart of the Turtle.
' The peculiar Arteries and Veins of the Heart, and the
* Coronary Vessels.
* The Motion of the Adult Heart.
^ The Motion of the Brain ; shewing that its Animation is
^ co-incident with the Respiration of the Lungs.
* The Cortical Substance of the Brain.'
These articles are composed of a series of extracts com-
prising the observations of the best Anatomists, followed bj
Swedenborg's own comments and inductions.
This method of procedure has led some cursory readers
of ^ The Animal Kingdom^ to conclude, that Swedenboig's
knowledge was derived solely from anatomical books and
drawings, and not from actual dissection of the Human Body.
He leaves us however in no doubt, that he fi^nented the
dissecting-room, but whether in HoUand, Paris, or Venice he
does not say: probably wherever in his travels there was
an anatomical school he found means of entrance to it Hb
reasons for making these carefrd digests of the observations of
others we quote at length, as they supply at the same time an
accurate estimate of his own speculative genius.
' In the experimental knowledge of Anatomy our way has
' been pointed out by men of the greatest and most cultivated
' talents, such as, Eustachius, Malpighi, Ruysch, Leeuwenhoek,
* Harvey, Morgagni, Vieussens, Lancisi, Window, Ridley,
* Boerhaave, Wepfer, Heister, Steno, Valsalva, Duvemey,
^ Nuck, Bartholin, Bidloo, and Vcrheyen, whose discoveries,
^ fiur from consisting of falladous, vague, and empty specu-
swedenborg's method. 125
lations, will for ever continue to be of practical use to
posterity.
' Assisted by the studies and elaborate writings of these
illustrious men, and fortified by their authority, I have re-
solved to commence and complete my design ; that is to say,
to open some part of those things^ which it is generally supposed
Nature has involved in obscurity. Here and there I have
taken the liberty of throwing in the results of my own
experience; but this only sparingly, for on deeply considering
the matter, I deemed it better to make use of the facts sup-
plied by others. Indeed there are some that seem bom for
experimental observation, and endowed with a sharper insight
than others, as if they possessed naturally a finer acimien ;
such are Eustachius, Ruysch, Leeuwenhoek, Lancisi, &c.
There are others again who enjoy a natural faculty for
contemplating facts already discovered, and eliciting their
causes. Both are peculiar gifts and are seldom united in the
same person. Besides I found when intently occupied in
exploring the secrets of the Himian Body, that as soon as I
^Boovered anything that had not been observed before, I
b^;an (seduced probably by self-love) to grow blind to the
most acute lucubrations and researches of others, and to
orig^inate a whole series of inductive arg^uments from my
particular discovery alone ; and consequently to be incapaci-
tated to view and comprehend, as accurately as the subject
required, the idea of universals in individuals, and of indi-
viduals under universals. Nay, when I essayed to form
prindides firom these discoveries, I thought I could detect in
various other phenomena much to confirm their truth, although
in reality they were fairly susceptible of no construction of
the kind. I therefore laid aside my instruments and restrain-
ing my desire for making observations, determined rather to
rely on the researches of others than to trust to my own.'*
« Introduction to * The Eeonomy,' Nos. 17 and 18.
126 DANGER OF SPECULATION.
That he was not insensible to the. dangers, which beset one
^ who enjoys a natural faculty for contemplating foi/cta already
*' discovered^ and eliciting their causes^^ take this —
^ To a knowledge of the causes of things nothing but
' eaperience can guide us ; for whenr the mind, with all the
^ speculative force which belongs to it, is left to rove abroad
^ without this guide, how prone it is to fall into error, yea into
' errors and errors of errors ! How futile it is after this, or at
^ any rate how precarious, to seek confirmation and support
*from experience! We are not to deduce experience from
' assumed principles, but to deduce principles themselves from
' experience ; for in truth we are surrounded wiHi iUusive and
^ fallacious lights, and are the more likely to fall because our
* very darkness thus counterfeits the day. When we are
^ carried away by ratiocination alone, we are somewhat like
' blindfolded children in their play, who, though they imagine,
* that they are walking straight forward, yet when their eyes
* are unbound, plainly perceive that they have been following
^ some roundabout path, which, if pursued, must have led them
* to the place the very opposite to the one intended.*
Indeed Swedenborg's mind was essentially constructive ;
whenever it was plunged in a solution of facts crystallization
at once ensued ; by nature he was an architect and no brick-
maker. His commentaries on the facts of the Anatomists
manifest in every page the creative spirit which transforms
the inorganic to the organic. He was, of course, limited by
his materials, as is the life of a plant by the conditions of
soil and climate in which it is set; therefore where the
Anatomists were wrong or imperfect his doctrine grew crooked,
gnarled and weak. Many too and serious were the faults on
his side ; he had the plan of a palace into which the bricks of
the Anatomists were to be built ; and when their bricks were
unequal to his scheme the invention which contrived the
♦ Introduction, No. U.
SERIES AND DEGREES. 127
Universe of * Hie Principia^^ was seldom at a loss to evolve
whatever was thought lacking from the intuitions of his Soul.
His commentaries on the Anatomists culminate in an
article entitled —
* An Introduction to Rational Psychology/
and a conriderable treatise on the object of his quest —
* The Human Soul.'
The * Introduction to Bational Psychology' sets forth a
doctrine of Series, Order, and Degrees. In * The Princtpia*
he taught us, that Nature or Creation commenced in a Sun of
Points, which by a series of condensations and coacervations
thickened into Earth. Unless we see and clearly recognize
these g^radations, he tells us, we shall wearily and hopelessly
seek after any knowledge of the Soul ; for an ordination and
co-ordination of Causes and Effects, of Actives and Passives
pervade the Universe from its inside to its outside, and
* eonaequently the Science of Nature depends on a distinct
^notion of Series and Degrees, and of their order, relation,
'and sabordination.
< The more any one is perfected in judgement the more
' deariy does he perceive, that there is an Order in things, that
' there are Degrees of Order, and, that it is by these alone he
'can prepress from the lowest sphere to the highest, or from
'the outermost to the innermost.
< As Nature betakes herself upward from visible phenomena,
'or in other words withdraws herself inwards, she instantly,
'is it were, disappears, whOe no one knows what has become
'of her, or whither she has gone, so that it is necessary to take
'Science as our guide in pursuing her steps.
' The Sdence which does this I call the Doctrine of Series
* or Degrees, or the Doctrine of Order.*
♦ Part II., No. 810.
128 A MAP OF THE UNIVERSE.
Creation he divides into Six Series ranged under two heads^
three superior and three inferior, thus —
The superior or circumambient Worid comprising —
1. The First Substance consisting of Points of Force or
Motion.
2. First Finites formed from the coaoervation of free
gyrating Points. First Finites compose the Fire of the Sun
and the Fire of all combustion.
3. The four Auras — Air, Ether, Magnetism, and an Ele-
ment subtler and within Magnetism for which he gives no
name save Second Finites or the First Element, which occupies
the spaces between Suns and Earths.
Produced from the superior is the inferior World, com-
prising—
1. The Mineral Kingdom, the parent of vegetables and
animals.
2. The Vegetable Eangdom deriving its existence from
the Mineral, in which also, as in a matrix or womb, it deposits
its seed as often as it proceeds to renew its birth.
3. The Animal Kingdom demanding for its existence and
subsistence the service of the whole preceding Creation. ^ The
' last of the Series in the Animal Kingdom is Man, the most
^ perfect Animal and the complement of all things, the micro-
^ cosm of the macrocosm.
^ In these Six Series,^ says he, ^ Nature seems to have
* rested, for there is no seventh.'*
From all this it is plain, that Swedenborg during the
seven years, which had elapsed, had been labouring within the
imaginary fence he had thrown round the Universe in his
treatises, * The Pnncipia^ and ' The Infinite.^ His field he
had not enlarged, but in it he had diligently digged and
thickly planted, keeping a constant eye on the methods of
ctdture favoured by Philosopher Wolf.
» Part I., No. 684.
8BRIC8 AKD SERIES OF SERIES. 129
The Six Series, into which he divides Oreatioii, are again
* divisible into series, and Vries of series^ There is nothing
^ which is not a series in a series. Mere series, and series of
* series constitute Arithmetic, Geometry, Physics, Physiology,
* yea, all Philosophy. By series it is that we speak, reason,
^ and act. Onr sensations too are series of varieties, more
^ or less harmonious, whence result agreement, imagery, idea
' and reason. Where all is equality, or where there is no
* aeries, Nature perishes.*
From thb law of series he excepts only No. 1, the First
Sabstance consisting of Points of Force or Motion. ^ The
' First Substance of the World is the only one which does not
^ fiJl under the notice of the understanding as some kind of
Creation was thus to Swedenborg a circular process.
From the first Substance was derived the Sun, from the Sun
the Aorms, from the Auras Water, from Water Minerals, from
ICnerals Vegetables, from Vegetables Animals, from Animals
Man, iidiose Soul reascends and touches the First Substance
of the Worid, to which it stands subordinate and one with the
Son^s fire. The ring, we see, was complete.
Bearing this notion in mind enables us to appreciate such
^ Whereas the Soul has her residence in a place so sublime
^aad eminent, that we cannot ascend to her except by a
^ptiticolar and general investigation of the lower things of
^ W Kingdom, or whereas she Uves so far within, tiiat she
^cannot be exposed to view until the coverings under which
*Ae is ludd«!i are unfolded and removed in order; it hence
^Woomes necessary, that we ascend to her by the same steps
^^iegreea, and the same ladder by which her nature descends
'iB the formation of her body.' *
In order to speak of the Soul, and the unseen things of
• Part I., No. 679.
K
130 Locke's golden essay quoted.
Niature he felt the need of what he calls ' A Mathematical
' Philosophy of Universals.' He writes—
' The Doctrine of Series and Degrees only teaches the
' distinction and relation between things superior and inferior,
' or prior and posterior ; it is unable to express by any
^ adequate terms of its own, those things which transcend
^ the sphere of familiar things. K therefore we would ascend
^to a higher altitude, we must use terms which are still more
' abstract, universal and eminent, lest our corporeal Senses
^ confound things of which we ought not only to have distinct
* perceptions, but which, in reality, are distinct.
^ Hence it is necessary to have recourse to a Mathematical
' Philosophy of Universab, by which we shall be enabled not
* only to signify higher ideas by letters, but also to reduce
\ them to a certain philosophical calculus
* That such a Science of Sciences may be found many of
' the learned have already suspected — nay, they have beheld
* it as afar off. The illustrious Locke, in his golden * Essay
' ' concerning the Human Understanding ^^ near the close of the
* work, after his profound investigation of the powers of tlie
' mind, discovers at last, as if by divination, that there is yet
' another and profoimder Science. ' Perhaps,' says he, ' if
^ * Ideas and Words were distinctly weighed and duly con-
* ' sidered, they would afford us another sort of logic and
* ' critic, than what we have hitherto been acquainted with.' •
* In another place he observes, ' The Ideas, that Ethics are
^ ^ conversant about, being all real Essences, and such as I
' ' imagine have a discoverable connection and agreement one
^ ' with another ; so far as we can find their habitudes and
^ ' relations, so far we shall be possessed of certain real and
* * general truths ; and I doubt not, but 1f a right method
' ' were taken, a great part of Morality might be made out
* ' with that clearness, that could leave, to a considering man.
* Book IV., chap, xxi., sec. 4.
THB SOUL MUST BE DISCOVERED. 131
^ ^ no more reason to doubt, than he could have to doubt of
^ ^ the truth of propositions in Mathematics, which have been
^ ^ demonstrated to him/ ^*
Supposing a Mathematical Philosophy of Universals at->
tained, yet says Swedenborg, ^ I am strongly persuaded, that
^ the essence and nature of the Soul, its influx into the Body,
^ and the reciprocal action of the Body, can never come to
'demonstration unless with these doctrines is combined a
'knowledge of Anatomy, Pathology, and Psychology, yea
' even of Physics, and especially of the Auras of the World :
' and that unless our labours mount from Experience, we shall
♦ in every new age have to build new systems, which in their
' turn will tumble to the ground, without the possibility of
' being rebuilt.
^ This, and no other, is the reason, that with diligent study
' and intense application, I have investigated the Anatomy of
' the Body in all its parts. In doing this, I may perhaps have
' gone beyond the ordinary limits of enquiry, so that but few
' of my readers may be able distinctly to understand me. Thus
* far however I have felt bound to venture, for I have resolved,
' oost what it may, to trace out the nature of the Human
' Soul.'t
The reader, tired with these preliminaries, may impatiently
ask, ^^ What conclusions did Swedenborg come to concerning
" the Soul ? Did he uncover it ? Did he find it, or imagine
'^ that he had laid hold of it in any way ? Let me know, in a
" few words, the nett result of his research pursued through
" these two big volumes 1"
Need I say, that Swedenborg cut up the Body, but did not
cut into the Soul?
Seven years before, he had settled what the Soul wasj
he had pronounced it *the last and subtilest part of the
Body.'
« Book IV., chap, xii., sec. 8. t Tart 11., Noh. 213, 214.
132 THE SOUL IN THE ANIMAL SPIRITS.
He came therefore to Anatomy, not for instraction, but
for confirmation. The SonI was the inmost of the Body ; and
he enquired of Anatomy, what the inmost of the Body was.
The Anatomists he consulted held a notion which fitted
Swedenborg^s to a nicety ; firom the greatest to the least they
all believed in Animal Spirits, or a Spirituous Fluid. He
writes —
^ The learned in general and the Anatomists in particular
^ describe the Animal Spirits as running through the finest
^ threads of the Nerves, as calling out the force of the Muscles,
^ as being sublimated from the Blood, and as having their
^ birth in the Brain, which they term the mart and emporium
* of the Animal Spirits.* •
The fact is, that this doctrine of a Nerve Spirit has never
ceased to be orthodox until our own day. All the old masters
in Anatomy were its adherents. They never saw the Spirit,
but as Haller observed, ^ that only proves the weakness of our
^ Senses, but has no validity against the existence of a Juice
* or Spirit in the Nerves.'
And Swedenborg seconds Haller, saying —
^ The red Blood is divisible into a purer Blood and into a
^ purest, which we call the Spirituous Fluid. The Spirituous
^ Fluid cannot be seen even with the aid of the microscope ;
^ but we ought not therefore to deny the fact Our Senses
' lead us only to the threshold where Nature begins to act
^ most perfectly and live most distinctly. It has pleased the
^ Divine Being to give us Reason to follow up the thread
^ where the Senses fail. Were we therefore to terminate our
^ researches by the limits of our sight, we should dejnive
' Reason of its privileges, and hence be little wiser than the
* beasts.' f
The wisest among old Anatomists knew, that it was vain
to seek the Animal Spirits in the corpse. The diiFerenoe
* Part II.. No 246. t Part II., No. 122.
THE ANIMAL SPIRITS AND THE BLOOD. 133
between a live Body and a dead one was, in their eyes, the
difference between tfie presence and the absence of Animal
^^ts. They knew that a corpse was not a Man, but only
a Testore from which the Man had fled ; that which had fled
they called Animal Spirits. Some of them said the Animal
Spirits were the Soid, some said they were only the Body of
the Soul, and some gave other definitions of their being and
ibnctioiifl ; but all united in the confesrion of their existence.
These Animal Spirits were precisely what Swedenborg
wanted for the perfection of his theory. So essential were
diey to him that he says —
^ With those who deny the existence of an Animal Spirit,
^aa denying First Principles, I hold no disputation. Their
'minds, mmk in unwisdom, are entirely confined to their eyes,
* and all causes with them are confused in effects.^ *
His doctrine of the Soul then found its Body in the
Animal Spirits of the Anatomists.
In the pursuit of his argument he limits his attention to
the Blood. * Whatever exists in the Body,' he says, ^pre-
^exists in the Blood.' The bones, the flesh, the skin are no
^ more than concrete Blood.
^ The Blood is the complex of all things, that exist in the
^Worid, and the store-house and seminary of all, that exist
^in the Body. The Blood contains salts of every kind, both
^ fixed and volatile, and oils, spirits and aqueous elements; in
' fine, whatever is created and produced by the Three King-
'doma of the World, the Animal, the Vegetable, and the
'ICneraL Moreover the Blood imbibes the treasures, that
^ die Atmo8|^ere carries in its bosom, and to this end exposes
^itself to the air through the medium of the lungs.
' Knee the Blood then is an epitome of the riches of the
^ whole World and all its Kingdoms, it would appear as if all
• r*rt II., No. 165.
i
134 ALL THINGS MAY BE FOUND IN BLOOD.
^ things were created for the purpose of administering to the
' composition and continued renewal of the Blood. For if all
^ things exist for the sake <^ Man, and with a view to afford
^ him the conditions and the means of living, then all things
^ exist for the sake of the Blood, which is the parent and
^ nourisher of every part of his Body ; for nothing exists in
^ the Body which has not previously existed in the Blood. • • • .
^ From these remarks we may readily perceive how many
^ Sciences are included in the Science of the Blood : namely,
^the whole circle of Anatomy, Medidne, Chemistry, and
^ Physics, and even of Psychology ; for the passions of the
^ Mind vary according to the states of the Blood, and the states
^ of the Blood according to the passions of the Mind. In a
^word, the Science of the Blood includes all the Sciences
^ which treat of the substances of the World, and of the
^ forces of Nature. For this reason we find, that Man did
^ not begin to exist till the Elingdoms ol Nature were com-
^ pleted, and, that the World and Nature then concentrated
^ themselves in Man ; in order that in the Human Microcosm
^ the whole Universe might from first to last be exhibited for
♦ contemplation.' •
Holding these opinions, he reasonably narrows and simpli-
fies discussion by confining attention to the Blood. Since the
Body is made out of the Blood, to understand the Blood is at
the same time to understand the Body ; skin, flesh, and bones
are therefore put aside.
In the ^Prtncipid* he told us, that a Water-globule was the
ultimate and the first material outMK)me of the inner force of
Nature. For like reasons he now tells us the same concerning
a Red Blood-globule.
^ There is not in the whole compass of Nature a single
^ compound entity more simple and perfect than a globule of
^ Blood. Blood comprehends in every one of its spherules.
* Part I., N'os 3, A, and 7
THE THKEE BLOODS. 135
^ mere First Principles, Elements, and Simples. Consequently
* R possesses potentially and virtually every single thing in the
' Mundane System which is producible from First Principles,
^ Elements, or Simples. Hence the infinite variety
^ of liquids and solids in the Animal Elingdom, which proceed
^ firom one only fountain, which is the Blood.' *
The Red Blood-globule, following Leeuwenhoek, he says,
is composed of six globules of White Blood. These six
globules of White Blood are again divisible into smaller
globules, and these again into smaller still, which the eye with
every help cannot follow. These globules, consbting of pellucid
spheres, compose the purer or middle Blood, inside which abide
the Animal Spirits. He thus ^ves us three orders of Blood —
I. The Animlal Spirits, which he identifies with the first
Aura of Creation.
II. The White Blood, which he identifies with the Element
of Ether.
in. The Bed Blood.
The cohesion of the six globules which make up the Red
Blood-globule he accounts for by giving them a base in
a partide of common Salt. Every Red Blood-globule has a
centre in a cube of Salt, whose six sides are hollowed out for
die reception of the six smaller globules, and into the eight
in^es found at their circumference he inserts six trigons of
Salt with curved sides. In this way he explains the existence
of the firm and compact Red Blood-globule.
The Red Blood-globules float in Serum, and from out the
Serum the cubes and trigons of Salt are taken, which are
reqidred for the composition of the Red Blood-globules.
'The Serum is as it were the atmosphere in which the
^ Blood floats, and from which it derives its elements ; whcrc-
^ fore such as the Serum is, such is the Blood arising from it,
*ind such as is the Blood such is the Serum.
* Part I., No. 115
L
136 THE QREAT &ALT DOCTRINE.
^ In the Semm are Spirits, Oils, and Salts of every kind
^ derived from the Stomach through the medimn of the Chyle,
^ and in Water as a vehicle. In the various kinds of food we
^ eat and drink are contained the three well-known principles,
^ namely Spirit or Oil, Salt and Earth, and Water or Phlegm,
^ each of which may be disengaged by a moderate chemical
^ heat. This is effected in the Stomach, that beautifully coated
^ chemical bladder and retort of animal nature.' *
It may be well to pause here for a little, and in a few
words set forth Swedenborg's doctrine of Salt
In his ^ Principta'* he told us, that the Mineral Worid
originated in Salt formed between the interstices of Water-
globules ; Water, in his idea of Creation, following Air and
preceding Earth. ^ Experience,' says he, ^ informs us, that
^ the particles of Sea-Salt have their birth in the Water, or
* between the particles of the Water.'
A particle of Salt shaped in the interstices of Water-
globules is a cube with six sides and eight angles, and each
side with a concavity answering to the convexity of the
Water-globules surrounding it.
When the eight angles of a cube of Salt are broken off
there result eight pyramids, each with four solid angles and
three concave sides.
From these pyramids of Salt, variously modified, are
derived * every kind of Acid and Alkali.'
If these pyramids of Salt are still further comminuted,
' we then have quadrangular and triangular solids of a shape
* similar to the particles of common Salt and Acids, only
^ smaller, and forming the class of volatile aortal Saks J*
* From them Oils are produced and conglomerated. These
* Salts constitute the superficies of Oil^globules, the Ether
' occupying the inside of each Oil-globule.
* Pai-t 1., No». 48 and 4l>.
THE OMNIPRESENCE OF SALT. 137
'If again the particles of these volatile atrial Salts be
'diridfid into parts still more minute, there arise the moat
^vclaJtih etkereal Salts.
'From them Spirits are produced and conglomerated.
' Sfnrits are therefore as it were most highly rectified Oils.'
'The particles of Oils and Spirits are of the same dimension
' and diameter with those of Water, for they are composed of
' the primitiYe elements of common Salts, whence they derive
' forms having a like magnitude with that of the particles of
'Water. Moreover, common Salt is the measure and type
^of the particles of all liquid substances; and when these
^ partides are fitted to the hollow sides of Salts, and are as it
'were poured into them, there arises a convexity in the liquid
'particle corresponding to the conaiviiy of the saline.
' Hence the reader may perceive that Salts are divisible
'into three generations, degrees, or orders, and that the
'Mline particles, of whatever order, are all similarly cubical or
'pjrramidal, that they are all hard or inert corpuscles, never
'movable one among the other without the aid of Waters or
' Ain, that they are of themselves fixed, and impart fixity to
'other things, that they are neither expansile nor elastic,
'•lid that they temper in different manners the fluidity of
' active substances.
' From these considerations it is clear, that by help of a
'perfect Chemistry, such as that which is exercised by Nature,
'tod which connsts in being able out of anything to produce
^(^jfthmg^ we may out of one compounded Salt, or a quantity
'of primitive Salts, by help of distillation, sublimation, rectifi-
^^kfOy circulation, filtration, commixtion, digestion, precipi-
^s^ or crystallization, educe any substance or menstruum
^^plmse.
'Sodi then are the prindples of Salts, Acids, Oils, and
'Sprits, so fieur as I have been able to deduce them from the
experimental Sdences. This doctrine of Salts however, con-
' ^ring, that it is of such exalted utility, and that it requires
r
I
138 THE BLOODS AND tHEIR OBQANd.
^ for its full developement 0ndi immenae research, demands a
^ still further portion of lime and study to be duly understood ;
^ indeed it is a subject which merits a separate treatise.' *
From these notes we obtain some idea of Swedenborg's
notion of the myriad offices of Salt, and at the same time
take a lesson in the Chemistry of last century.
The Bed Blood has its birth in the Stomach, firom which it
ascends as Chyle into Serum, and is taken up and worn as a
vesture by the purer, middle or White Blood.
The White Blood is derived firom the Ether sucked out of
the Air in the Lungs.
^ The Lungs may be conndered as a single Stomach con-
* sisting of an infinite number of smaller ones, but feeding on
^ atrial food, just as the Stomach feeds on terrestrial food.' f
Not only through the Lungs, but also through the Skin
does the White Blood draw from the Air the Ether it requires
for its sustenance.
Not only Ether, but also volatile Salts are absorbed by the
Lungs and Skin from the Air.
The Ether is said to embrace an ocean of saline and
sulphurous effluvia from animak, vegetables and earths. This
effluvia is presented to the White Blood by means of the
Limgs and Skin, and firom it absorbs the Salts it needs. The
White Blood-globule, like the Red, b a globule by means of
Salts ; but by Salts of a far rarer order.
As the Bred Blood is the vesture of the White ; so the
White Blood is the vesture of the Animal Spirits.
The Brain is the organ of the Animal Spirits; as the
Stomach is of the Red Blood, and the Lungs of the White.
The Animal Spirits ^ by a transcendental art ' are elaborated
in the cortical spherules of the Brain ; * by a wonderful process
* they are conceived within, and excluded firom the exquisitely
» Part I., No8. 70-79. f Part I., No. 51.
THE BRAIN AND THE LUNGS^ 139
^fine wombs of the cortical Babstanoe/ and by tfie Nerves are
oonveyed to the remotest hamlets of the Body, and emitted
into the Blood. The Nerves are the conduits of the Animal
Spirits, and through them they glide with the swiftness of light.
There is no part or substance, in the Body which is not
permeated and interfused by the Animal Spirits ; ^ they are
^the life and the cause, the mother and the nurse of the
^ inferior Bloods,' and of all the bones and tissues condensed
from the Blood.
The Brain pulsates and propels the Animal Spirits through
the Nerves just as the Heart does the Bed Blood bred in the
Stomach. What the Heart is to the arterial and venous
circoUtion, Ae Brain is to the nervous. Each of the spherules
of the cortical substance is a little heart, prefixed to its fibre
ind by a perpetual systole and diastole does its work.
In this work the Brain is assisted by the Lungs. Between
die pulsations of the one and the respirations of the other
there is a perfect accord. The peculiarity of Swedenborg's
own breathing probably directed his attention to the intimate
relation between the Brain and the Lungs. He had from
duldhood been used to sink into depths of thought, in which,
vUk his Brain paused, his Lungs lay still. The state was a
kind of trance which after middle life developed into a pro-
figioos fecnlty. Any one, who pays attention to his own
Noughts and breathings, will quickly observe how intimately
thej oorreqx)nd. As often as the Brain is intent, and thinking
^^y, it will be noticed, that the Lungs rest inactive ; when
the Brain is exhilarated and joyous, that the Lungs expand
and inhale great gusts of Air ; when the Brain collapses with
^) that the Lungs do the same ; and when the Brain is
<itttQrbed with anger, that the Lungs gulp in the Air in quick
■MNithiiils. All know the meaning of the deep sigh of care,
vIMi is only a great breath inspired and expired after a
J*olongod thought. The sympathy between the Brain and
^ Icings is perfect.
140 ANIMAL SPIRITS ARE THE SOUL'S BODY.
We have thus three fountains for the three Bloods : the
Brain for the Animal Spirits, the Lungs for the White Blood,
and the Heart for the Red. The motion of the Bed Blood is
Rotatory, of the White Spiral, and of the Animal Spirits
Vordcal.
At fo:*8t Swedenborg seemed inclined to think, that in the
Animal Spirits he had found the Soul. He owned, that though
every thing in the Body confirmed their existence yet ^ they
^ could not be discovered by the acutest sense, because they lie
^ so deeply hid in Nature, and that no thought can approach
* unto them, except by way of Analogy, and the Doctrine of
^ Series and Degrees joined to Experience : nor can the Animal
^ Spirits be described save by recourse to a Mathematical
* Philosophy of Universals.' •
After a while however he decided, that the Animal ^irits
were not the Soul, but the Body of the Soul, and the Soul he
removed into a higher and inner region, saying, ^ That the
^ Animal Spirits are the organ of the Soul, just as the eye is
^ the organ of sight, the ear of hearing, the tongue of taste,
^ and the brain of universal perception, f
^ Enlightened Reason leads us to believe, that the Anhnal
^ Spirits are not the first of substances, although they are the
* first substance in the Animal Series, being formed firom the
'first Aura,' or the Element within and anterior to the
Magnetic* 'The Animal Spirits form and rule the Body,
' but they in turn are ruled and formed by the higher forces of
' the Soul.' These condufflons he attains ' by that Intaition
' whereby many truths are captured without the aid of the
' Sciences, or the help of fitur-fetched arguments, by that
' Intuition, which enables us to decide in an instant whetho:
' what any one tells us is true, or not.' (
At the end of his work we find ourselves no nearer a
resolution of the mystery of the Soul than at the beginning.
• Pkrt U., No. »19. tiO. t I'krt II.. No. S^W, | Pkrt 11., No. »27.
THB SOUL STILL A MTSTBRT. 141
Bdund the screen of the Animal Spirits he places the Sonl,
and the sum of his doctrine concerning it is merely a sublima*
tion of his Intnitions about the Animal Spirits.
< In r^ard to sabstance the SonI is a flnid, yea, a fluid
^ most absolute. It is produced by the Aura of the Umverse ;
^ it is enclosed in the fibres (^ the Body, of which it is the
^ snpereminent organ If it is asked, Whether the
'Soul be material or immaterial, I inquire. Pray, what is
' Matter ? K it be defined as extension endued with inertia,
' then the Soul is not material ; for inertia only belongs to the
^ last things of Nature, such as Water and Minerals. The
' first Aura of the Woiid is not Matter in this sense, neither
' gravity nor levity can be predicated of that Aura ; but on
^ the contrary, active force On the other hand. Is
^not eveiything in Creation extended?* and since extended,
^May not the Soul on that ground be called material? Let
' 08 not however trifle over words.' f
The Sold is thus only the Animal Spirits rarefied, for
Cn^tion he keeps iterating pwH^eeds by Series and Degrees
from rare to dense, firom thin to thick. As he says —
^ There is only one first substance of Creation, from it all
'thmgs are derived, in it the principles of aU things are
^ impressed by the Deity.' (
Hence by Analogy he holds that he may infer the first
from the last, the unseen from the seen.
We have in these speculations a marked advance on the
Wd Materialism in which seven years before he worked when
^ting ^ On the Intercourse between the Soul and the Body; '
ttd now, as then, we note with pleasure, that he felt the
* Here it his old ikUacj, the root of error and despair in these speculations.
AQtyngi in Greatkm are not extended ; Loye, Reason and Memory, and the
<>iBdets ezhrtences of the Bptritual Uniyerse, are not to he understood or
^^EpUned by any sublimation of Matter.
tPtotll., No. 311.
\ Ptot I., No. 591.
142 THE SOUL NOT TO BE TRAPPED.
insufficiency of his doctrine, and his willingnees to rise and
leave all as labour lost, and enter upon new and more arduous
toils if so be the truth may be won.
^ To discover the Soul there are two ways ; one by bare
* reasoning, the other by the Anatomy of the Body. On
^ making the attempt I found myself as far firom my object
^ as ever. No sooner did I feel the Soul within my grasp
^ than I found it eluding me, though it never wholly dismp-
^ peared from my view. Thus my hopes were not destroyed,
^ but deferred, and I have frequently reproached myself with
^ stupidity for being ignorant of that, which was yet every-
* where most really present to me ; since by reason of the Soul
' we hear, see, feel, perceive, remember, imagine, think, desire,
* will, and by the Soul we are, move and live. The Soul it
^ is by cause of which, and out of which the visible corporeal
^ kingdom chiefly exists, and to the Soul we are to ascribe
* whatever excites our wonder in the Body ; for the Body is
^ constructed after the image of the Soul. Thus did I seem
' to see, and yet not to see, the very object with the desire cf
^ hnovoing which I was never at rest. At length I awoke as
^ from a deep sleep and discovered, that nothing is further
^ removed from the Understanding than what is present to it,
^ that nothing is more present to the Understanding, than what
^ is universal, prior and superior, than what is indeed itself.
* What is more omnipresent than the Deity, — in Him we
*live, and arc and move, — and yet, What is more remote
* from the operation of the Understanding?'*
He adds —
^ Of what consequence is it to me, that I should persuade
* any one to embrace my opinions ? Let his own Reason
^ persuade him. I do not undertake this work for the sake of
^ honour or money ; both of which I shim rather than seek,
' because they disquiet the mind, and because I am content
* Part 11.. No. 208.
GOD ALONE IMMORTAL. 143
^with my lot: but for the sake of truth, which alone is
*• immortal.' *
Not the least interesting portions of ^ The Economy of ^e
^ Ammai Kingdom ' are several in which wo note the early
dawn of some of the chief ideas which gave specialty to his
fiitare life, and which have made him a name among men.
These for instances.
The Spiritual Body.
Writing in 1734 he told us, that ^ the main end ' of his
eoDtemplated physiological labours would be, ^ to demonstrate
< the immortality of the Soul to the very Senses. 't
The Body of the Soul, as we have read, he concluded was
constituted of Animal Spirits, which are one in substance with
the First Aura, or that interior sphere of Nature which lies
within the Magnetic Element.
* Now,' he says, * should any one of the external spheres
'of Nature be dissolved, the internal nevertheless remain
' unharmed ; for though the effect be lost the cause endures :
' thus wherever Air ceases Ether is found : when the Bed
^ Blood dies the Animal Spirits survive: though death destroy
^the Body the Soul escapes unscathed. |
' Hence the human Spirituous Fluid is above all the harms
^ which can befall the earthly Body. It is indestructible and
^immortal, though not immortal per se. The Soul cannot
^ truly of itself be called immortal; because it is created by
^die one Inmiortal Being, Who is Eternal Life. For Him
'to create anything in itself immortal would be to create, that
^witich He is. Whereas, what God does, is to preserve the
^Sool immortal through His indwelling.
* When by death the Soul is emancipated from the bonds
• htt II., No. 21S. t 'Intercourse hOwetn the Sotd and the Body,' Sec. XIII.
i Part I., No. 67.
I
144 KG EBBUERECriOM OF THE FLESH.
^andtrmmmdsof the Ilarth, it appean in the exact form of the
^ Human Body, and enters on a life pure beyond imagination.
* Had I not found myself supported by the authority of the
^ most Christian Fathers, I should not have dared to pronounce
* the opinion, that the Sjurituous fluid will live after the death
^ of the Body ; but these Fathers held it for certain, that we
^ shall hereafter be Angelic Essmces. Thus Apuleius, Origen,
^Ambrose, Basil, Justin Martyr, Psellus, and Lactantius
^ beheved, that Angels have Bodies. Dionyuus the
^Areopagite, Philo Judff>.us, Athanasius, Chrysostom, and
^ Thomas Aquinas, with the Schoolmen, maintained that
^Angels are without Bodies. But all in modem
^ times agree, that we shall be purified Bodies, or Spirits
* without Bones and Flesh.' •
No Sesurrectianj or Setum to the Flesh,
' Freed from the entanglement of the Flesh, the Soul
^ rises from a lower to a higher life. Divested of the Bed
^ Blood, and the Flesh and Bone produced from that Blood,
* the Soul clothed with the Spirit preserves the perfect form of
*• the Body. Never again can it attract the elements fit>m the
^ three Kingdoms of the World wherewith to form anew a
^ floslily covoriug. The carnal Body is at death dissolved be-
* yond recovery ; the Soul has no more any need, or desire for
* its service. Nor can the Soul migrate back to Earth by means
^ of an ovum, according to the dreams of old philosophers; for
* the volume of the Animal Spirits is great, and cannot possibly
* begin e fhinimo ; tliereforc the Soul is, under the permanent
* necessity of living in its own sphere, and in no other. 'f
The Soul will be its own Judge.
^ After death not the smallest deed done designedly in the
♦ Piurt 11., Nos. 348, 349, 351. 35G. f Part II., No. 351.
HAN "SHALL DAMN HIMSELF. 145
^ life of the Body, and not the least word uttered by consent
* of the wiD, but shall appear in the bright Light of an internal
^ Wifldom before the tribunal of Conscience.
^ There are no innate laws in the Mind. Conscience is
* generated from instruction adopted by free choice, scrutinized
* by the reason, and passed by the judgment into the vrill.
^ When the conflict of life is over Conscience is discovered
^ either killed, wounded, or victorious. If killed, it is a sign
^that the Mind has given up all love and fear of higher
^ things, and has resigned itself to the rule of the lower forces.
^ If wounded, it is driven about from hope to despair, at one
^ moment laying down its arms in exhaustion, and at another
* renewing the combat, or else seeking solace in the doctrine
*of predestination, or of universal grace bestowed without
^ any effort to deserve it, or sometimes it attacks and impugns
^tfie Truth, although the Conscience, that does this is well
^nigh dead of its wound. If victorious, it overflows with
* transporting joys.
*In the Light into which the Soul enters at death the
^Consc^nce pronounces its own sentence. If good, it rejoices
^in the Light; if evil, it hastes away in pain, even as an
^injured eye shrinks into darkness, though all the while the
^ light is excellent and blameless.' *
The World is the Seminary of Heaven,
*We then clearly perceive, that everything in Creation
'tends to an end. What is the World, with its fonns and
fones, but a complex of means to a universal end ? That
^ is Man, whereby the Creator unites Himself with a
"^nsive Creation in a Society of Souls in the Heavens.
*If there be a Society of Souls, must not the city of God
^ the universal Earth be its seminary? The most universal
•^ of its citizens is, that they love their neighbour as them-
» Tart II., Non. 358-3r>3.
L
L
146 THEKE 18 NO LIFE SAVE OOD.
^ selves, and God more than themselves. All other things are
*' means to this Divine end.
' The Holy Scripture is the code of rules for attidning this
^ Divine end. These rules are not so dark and difficult as
' Philosophy and the Love of Self and the World would make
^ them ; nor so deep and hidden, that any sincere Soul led by
' the Spirit of God, may not draw water for all its needs.' •
God is the only Life ; Creation merely manijkats Him.
^ Life is one thing and Nature another.
^Nature in respect to Life is dead. K Nature lived, it
would live either from itself, or from some other thing, or by
some other thing. If it lived from itself then that would
live which we clearly see does not live ; and Life would di^
when the forms of Nature decay in which Life however is a
mere tenant. Every one must confess, that to confound
Nature with Life is to violate common sense.
' Nature only serves Life as an instrument. The Animal
Spirits are the purest organ of Nature in the Body, and are
most exquisitely adapted for the reception of Life from Him
Who is self-living, and without Whom not anything in
Nature could endure.
* The Soul lives from the Spirit of God, Who Is not
Matter but Essence : Whose Esse is Life, and Whose Life is
Wisdom.
* God is the Fountain of Life, the Sun of Wisdom, the
Spiritual Light, the very Esse and I AM ; in Whom we live,
and move, and have our being; from Whom, and for the
sake of Whom, are all things. This we are forbidden by
Holy Scripture to doubt; we are forbidden also by sound
Season, for the ancient philosophers acknowledged it out of
the mere light of their own understandings. " Life belongs
'to God, and the action of God is Life," says Aristotle;
* Part II., Nob. 364-866.
TWO SUNS AND THE SOUL. 147
* and again, " The operation of God is immortality, that is,
* * perpetual Life." ♦
The Sun of Nature and the Sun of God.
^ To know in what manner Life and Wisdom from God
flow into the Soul is infinitely above the sphere of the human
Mind ; there is no analysis and no abstraction, which can
reach so high ; for whatever is in God, and whatever law
God acts by, is Grod. The only representation wo can have
of it| is in the way of comparison with light ; for as the Sun
is the fountain of light to the World, so the Deity is the Sun
of Life and all Wisdom. As the Sun of the World flows in
one only manner, and without unitiou into the objects and
subjects of its Universe; so also does the Sun of Life and
Wisdom. As the Sim of the World flows in by mediating
Auras, so the Sun of Life and Wisdom flows in by the
mediation of His Spirit. As the Sun of the World flows
into objects and subjects according to the form of each ; so
also does the Sun of Life and Wisdom. We are not how-
ever at liberty to go further than this into the details of the
comparison ; inasmuch as the one Sun is within Nature, and
the other is above it : the one is physical, the other purely
moral, and the one lies under the range of the Mind, while
the other lies withdrawn among the sacred mysteries of
theology; between which two are boundaries, that it is
impoBflible for human faculties to transcend.' f
Mau derives his Smd from his Father and his Body from
his Mother.
' The Soul of every child is derived from its Father, and
*the Souls of all from Adam, who received his Soul imme-
^diately from the Creator. If the Soul is the Spirituous
^ Fluid, or the purest natural essence of man, it can come
• Part II., N«»R. 235. 24r». 311 t Pnrt IT., \o. 251.
I *>
I
148 CHARLES XII.
^ from no other place than the soil of its birdi in the Father.
^ The Body alone b from the Mother/ *
These passages are well worth careful notice ; as thej mark
a great advance in Swedenborg^s mind, and by and bye we
shall find the same opinions presented to ns with new develope-
ments as Dirine revebitions.
In dealing with an author so diflfuse as Swedenborg, a
severe curb has to be placed on quotation ; yet the reader
having borne so much, may perhaps suffer a few lines on
Swedenborg's old master, whom he adduces as an example of
true courage.
Charles XII.
^ Genuine valour is preceded and accompanied by no palpi-
tation of the heart, no cold sweat, no defection of the senses,
nor drooping of the limbs; that is to say, there is no
immoderate flux of the blood into the veins, no half dying
with fright, no dread of death, but rather a presence of mind,
a quick intellectual discernment, a strength of limb, a kind
of frothing of the cheeks from their glands, and an evolution
of glowing heat; that is to say, life is then greater in
quantity, and better in quality This true valour
was seen in Charles XII., late King of Sweden, that
Hero of the North, who knew not fear, nor that spurious
valour and daring which are excited by ardent spirits, fi»r
he never drank aught but pure water. Of him we may
Hay, that he led a life more remote from death, and in fact
lived more than other men.' t
* Part II., No. 295. This notion of the genesis of the Soul will play a
gn!At part in Swcdenljorg^s theological system. Aristotle maintained the same
opinion. 'The Body' says he, *4s from the female, the Soul from the male/
Ik Oenerat. Animal., lib. ii., cap. iv.
t Part I.. No. 232.
( 14» )
I
I
CHAPTER XIV.
THE ANIMAL KINGDOM.*
* Not very long since/ writes Swedenborg, * I published
^ ^ The Economy of the Animal Kingdom^'' and before travers-
^ ing the whole field in detaQ, I made a rapid passage to the
' Sool, and put forth an article concerning it. On considering
^the matter more deeply I found, that I had directed my
^ course thither too hastily ; after having explored the Blood
^ only and its organs : I took the step impelled by a burning
^ desire for knowledge.
^ As the Soul acts in the supreme and innermost parts, and
^ cannot be reached until all her swathings have one by one
^ unrolled, I am therefore determined to allow myself no rest
' until I have traversed the universal Animal Kingdom to the
* SooL By bending my course inwards continually, I shall
^open all the doors, which lead to her, and at length con-
^temjdate the Soul herself: by the Divine permission. 'f
Thus clearly does he set forth his aim, and thus his plan.
^ I intend to examine, physically and philosophically, the
* •Ssgmmm Animale Anatomiee, Physice et PhSUmophice perhutratum.
'(Vm -Aw PruM. De Vi$oenbu$ AbdominU $eu de OrganU Begwnu
'I^^moriB agU, Hagm Cbmi^Mi, apud Adriantim Blyvenhurgium, 1744.
* Begimm Anmale Anatamioe, Phffiice et PhiloeapMce perlustratum, CuJum
'iWt Sbcumda De Vtecenbue Thcrade $eu de Organii Regionie Superiorie
'egU, Hagm Comltumt apud Adrianum Bljfvenlmrgium, 1744.
* Begimm AmmaHe Anatamice, Pkyeiee, et PkUoeophioe perlugtratum. Oujus
' hn ThOa. De Cute, 8en»u Tactus, et Quetus; et de Formis Orgamde in
OfMere^agU, Landini, 17 ib J
t I*ftrt I., Prologae, No. 19.
150
A GRAND PttOSPECTUS.
' whole Anatomy of the Body, all its Viscera, abdominal and
' tlioracic, the Generative Organs of both sexes, and the
* Organs of the five Senses. Likewise,
' The Anatomy of all parts of the Cerebrum, Cerebellum,
^ Medulla Oblongstta, and Medulla Spinalis.
' Afterwards, the cortical substance of the two Brains, and
' their medullary fibre ; also, the nervous and muscular fibres
' of the Body, and the causes of the forces and motion of the
* whole organism : Diseases moreover, those of the Head par-
* ticularly, or, which proceed by defluxion from the Cerebrum.
^ I propose afterwards to ^ve an introduction to Rational
* Psychology, consisting of certain new Doctrines by the
* assistance of which, we may be conducted from the material
* Body to the immaterial Soul. These Doctrines are —
* Tlie Doctrine of Forms.
' The Doctrine of Order and
* Degrees.
* l^ho Doctrine of Series and
* Society.
The Doctrine of Influx.
The Doctrine of Corres-
pondence and Representa-
tion.
The Doctrine of Modifica-
tion.
' From these Doctrines I come to the Rational Psychology
' itself, whicli will comprise
* Subjects of Action.
* Extcnial and Internal
* Sense.
' Intellect, Thought and
' Will,
Imagination and Memory.
The Afibctions of the Will.
The Affections of the
Rational Mind,
Instinct.
' Lastly, of the Soul and of its connection and intercourse
' witli the Body, its affections and immortality, and of ita state
' when the Body dies. The work will conclude with a Con-
* cordance of Systems,
* From this summary the reader may see, that the end I
* propose is a knowledge of the SoiJ ; that knowledge will be
HE WRITEB FOR UNBELIEV£li8. 151
^ the crown of mj studies. This then my labours intend, and
^ thither they aim.' *
In what a different sense Swedenborg is here speaking of
the Soul firom that in which he formerly spoke, take this
example —
^ It is impossible to dimb or leap from the organic,
^physical, and material World — I mean, the Body — ^immc-
^ diately to the Soul, of which neither lilatter, nor any of the
^adjuncts of Matter are predicable; for Spirit is above the
^ comprehensible modes of Nature, and in that region where
^ the significations of physical things perish, ^f
Swedenborg supposes, that some may object to his search
after the Soul on the ground, that the Soul dwells in the realm
of Faith, and not of Intellect; and that Reason ought to
confine its exercise to the Earth, and not aspire to heights,
for which it has no wings, and which lie in the domain of
Revelation.
* I grant this,' he says. * Those who are inspired by a
^ IKvine Faith despise the assistance of confirmatory arguments,
^ and periiaps they will laugh at these labours of mine ; nor
^ would I persuade any one, who comprehends these high truths
*by Faith, to attempt to compass them by his Intellect: let
^him abstain from my books. Who so believes Revelation
^implicitly, without consulting the Intellect, is the happiest of
^mortals, the nearest to Heaven, and at once a native of both
^Worids,
* These pages of mine are written for those only, who never
* befieve anything but what they can receive with the Intellect ;
^oonaeqnently, who boldly invalidate, and are fain to deny the
^exigtenoe of all things subUmer than themselves, as the Soul
'itidf, and what follows therefrom — its life, immortality,
^hetven, etc These things, since they do not perceive them,
^they reject, classing them among empty phrases, phantasms,
• Part I., Prologue, Nos. li, 15. f Part I., Prologue, No. 17.
152 rSYNTUESlS AND AHALT1U8.
^ triflei), fables, conceita, and aelf-deliuioiis ; oonfloqoently, they
^ Iionoar and worship Nature, the Woiid and themselves;
^ in other respect^, they compare themflelves to hmtes, and
^ think, that they shall die as brutes die, and their souls exhale
^ and evaporate : thus they rush fearlessly into wickedness.
^ For these persons only I am anxious ; for them I indite,
* and to them I dedicate my work.**
There are two ways, says Swedenborg, which promise to
lead to the Soul — the Analytic and the SynthetiG, or the
Inductive and the Deductive.
The Synthetic conmiences from principles and causes, and
descends to Experience, to phenomena and effects.
The Analytic commences from experience, from phenomena
and effects, and ascends to prindples and causes.
Thus Analysis as a method of proceeding is the inverse of
Synthesis.
In the Synthetic way Swedenborg will not walk; he
utterly condemns it, saying —
^ Synthesis has been the favourite method witli philosophers
^ since philosophy began. It is a method pleasing and w<mi-
^ dcrfuUy akin to the human Mind ; it enables the philosopher
^ to indulge his own tastes, assume the prindples he likes, and
^ proclaim them as truths. Should anything adverse in ex-
^ pcricnco arise Synthesis easily polishes it away, represses, or
' removes it. We are very easily beguiled into the ideal g^ames
' of Synthesis ; the race is easy. We fix our goal, and bound
^ between it and the starting place.
^ Synthesis is easy and agreeable ; but it is not the way
* tliat leads to truth. Could any one tell me by Synthesis, or
* a priori^ what is contained in the Body ? Could any one
' witliout experience pre<Uct, that it contained a heart, liver,
* kidneys, arteries, mesentery, and a myriad other things?
* Part I., Pn)hifrue, N(»s. 21, 22
SYNTHESIS IS CUKSED. 153
« • • • . But alas I through Synthesis we are often so puffed
^ up with self-conceit, that we fancy we are in the sky when
^ we are squatting on the earth, in the light when we are in
* the dark, and at the inmost when we are no further than the
^outmost. Synthetic reasoning is the cause and source of
* the insanities of the human Mind.
' The Mind derives from the Senses, or absorbs through the
' Senses all the materials, on which it reasons.^ We are bom
'in complete ignorance, and in process of time our Senses
'are opened, through them impressions are received and
' sublimated into ideas, which by Beason are methodized into
' doctrines. Thus by slow degrees is the judgement developed;
' and this is Man's only way of attaining truths, so long as his
' Soul abides in the Body.
' In fact, Synthesis is nothing except a poor, precocious
^ and vague Analyas ; it gives out no more than has crept
^ into the Intellect by the Senses, and to a fragment of expe-
^lienoey frequently distorted, would subdue universal expe-
^ rience. Whence come opinions, hypothesis, theories, systems.
' These monsters of Hypotheus are bom, have their wor-
* shippers and their day of glory, grow old, die, and are
^forgotten; but from their ashes broods of new ones spring
^wUch walk as spectres through the earth, and like enchant-
^lesees distract the hxunan Mind perennially. Hence errors,
^mental darkness and strife, dvil wars between the Soul and
^Body, scholastic contentions over straws, the flight and exile
^ of truths, stupor and black night, all bred from the inclination
* and habit of Synthetic reasoning.' *
What an excellent piece of self-criticism and condemnation
^ we here ! Often whilst discussing ^ The Principia^ ^ The
^hjmiu'* and ' The Economy of the Animal Kingdom ' have
1 tit tempted to express my weariness with Swedenborgian
^'ttiiis in terms something like these ; but forbore ; knowing
• Part I., rrologQo No. 6-10 abridged.
L
151 AKALTSIS IS CH08B5.
niiat wM oommg. Hie f>i|HfjHiiw cf kis rembion against
theoiy goes however to an lumaifairtaUe tboogli natmal
extreme and exceeds his own intention; it is like an oat-
and-oot cane of wine in Ae suflmng and Asgnst, wUdi
follow a night of excess.
^ So much for Synthesis,* he continnes, ^now for Analvna.
^ Analysis commences from fiM?tS| efiects and phenomenal
and mounts to canses, and canses of cansesi It searches for
facts, collects Aem fr<nn eveiy quarter, heaps them together,
and again selecting them tma the heap, redooes them to
order. Anal jsb inyd^es all the Sdences, and widi their aid
the Mind girds hersdf to her task, and begins to boild. Thus
helped, the ^lind founds and rears her palace, not in the Air,
which is not her element, but on the solid Earth.
^ Analjas is the only open way to truths for us eartlnbom
men ; but verily it is a long and toilsome road ; for as aO
truths are related together, to attain thorough knowledge of
one we must needs make acquaintance with many. We must
make ourselves masters of all the Sciences and Arts: nay,
from those already known we must generate and discover
others. In a word, we must court all the Muses.
^ When at length by Analysis we have attained the prin-
ciples of things, we may then advocate them; and from
the mountwi of Prindple sit and contemplate the realm of
Experience. Yet when we have done our utmost, there will
remain many things hid in obscurity ; for, while the Mind is
buried in the Body it can never rise wholly above the mists
of the Senses.
^ We are now in possession of vast stores of experimental
knowledge, l}^g dead and unused. Let us then gird up our
loins for the work. Experience is at our side with a full horn
of plenty. The nine Virgins are present with the riches of
nearly two thousand years. Nor do I think we ou^t to
wait any longer, lest haply experimental knowledge should
Ix! overtaken by age, night and oblivion, and the Arts and
HOW FAR HIS SEARCH PROCEEDED. 155
^Sdences be carried to the tomb; for, unless I mistake the
' ngns of the times, the World's destinies are tending thither-
^ wards. All things, at the present day, stand provided and
^ prepared, and await the light. The ship is in the harbour,
Mhe sails are swelling, the east ¥mid blows; let us weigh
^ anchor and put forth to sea.' *
The order pursued in ^ The Animal Kingdom^ is the same
18 in ^ The Economy,^ First is premised a copious selection
of &ct8 firom the Anatomists on the organ under consideration,
and then follows Swedenborg's own induction, often as rich in
metaphor and analogy, observation and suggestion, as Bacon's
^Eaaays^ themselves.
He only published three volumes of his great undertaking.
The First Part appeared at Amsterdam in 1744. It treats
of the Viscera of the Abdomen, and consists of chapters on
the Tongue, Mouth and Fauces as the thresholds of the
abdominal regions, on the Pharynx, Stomach, Intestines,
Mesentery, Thoracic Duct, Glands, Liver, Pancreas, Spleen,
Kidneys, Bladder, and the Peritonoeum.
The Second Part likewise appeared at Amsterdam in
1744. It treats of the Viscera of the Thorax, and is com-
posed of chapters on the Nose, Larynx, Trachea, Lungs,
Heora, Thymus Gland, and the Diaphragm.
The Third Part appeared in London in 1745. It treats of
the Skin and the Sense of Touch, Organic Forms generally,
the Sense and Sensorium of Touch specifically, the Use of
Toach, and the Sense of Taste.
This third part was the last of Swedenborg's physiological
Publications. The work he had mapped out for himself he
**ver completed; yet his manuscripts prove, that he had
^l^ttjoed far beyond the point where he bade farewell to the
pinter; among them is a work on the Brain of upwards of a
* Part I., Prologue, Nw. 11, 14, 23, abridged.
L
fei
]5f; PHniOLUGICAL MASL'SCSlFn.
thfiuaand pages, beudea treatises on other portions of the
KiHly, some of which have of late jeans been printed. I
sliall not cumber these pages with their enumeration or
description, but enter them in the ample catalogue rofsoime
to be found in the Appendix.
( 157 )
CHAPTER XV,
THE W0B8HIP AND LOVE OF GOD .♦
The ^ Worship and Love of Chd^ although published in
London in 1745, would appear to have been written several
years preceding that date. Its structural affinity is closer to
< The Principia ' of 1734 than to < The Animal Kingdom ' of
1744, though annotated with his later thought. In ^ The
^ iVt nctjpta ^ Swedenborg worked out Creation as far as
Piradise, and in ^ The Worship and Love of Chd ' he takes
XBf the thread of his story and tells us how Plants and
Animals, and Adam and Eve were made. Why he entitled
Ibs book ' De Cultu et Amore Dei^' I cannot divine ; in any
ordinary sense it seems a misnomer.
He opens his work in telling us, that ^ walking alone in a
'pleMnt grove in Autumn for the purpose of composing my
^dioQghts, and observing that the trees were shedding their
^Mitge, and that the falling leaves were flying around, from
^ I became serious as I recollected the gratifications, which
^ grove, from the beginning of Spring even to this season,
'Ittd communicated, and so oflen diffused throughout my
'«yeMind.
*Oii seeing this change of scene, I began to meditate on
* 'Anv, /. D€ OuUueiAmore Dei; uhiagiturde Tdluru OHu, Parailiso
*^ HRBrio, tmm de PrimogenUi teu Adami NavUate, InfanHa el Amore. Ab
'^■tt^Bnedenborg. Londini, 1745.*
'^^tll. De Conjttgio Adami, et de Amma^ Menie luteUectuali, Statu
(if, H Imagime Dei. Ab Eman. Bwcdenborg. Londini, 11 Aft.*
158 MAN HAS HIS 3EAS0XS LIRE EARTH.
^ the vicissitudes of times ; and it occurred to me whether all
^ things relating to time do not pass through similar vicissi-
^ tudes : thus^ whether this is not the case with our lives as
^ well as forests ; for it is evident, that they too commence in
^ a kind of Spring and blossom, and passing throng their
^ Summer, sink rapidlv into their old age, the image of
^ Autumn. Nor is this the case only with individual lives,
* but also with the World, Nations and Societies. The World
^ has had its time of infancy and innocence called its gold and
^ silver ages, which, it is now believed, are about to be suc-
^ ceeded by the last or iron ages, which in their turn will
' shortly moulder away into rust or the dust of day/
The wise Ancients, he goes on to say, clearly perceived
from the analogy and this perpetual authority of Nature,
tliat Man must have had Ids Spring-time of innocence, when
Earth was a self-cultivated orchard and garden of Paradise
fanned with zephyrs and wanned with a gentle and con-
siderate Sun.
He too would revive and contemplate this Paradise with
its varied circumstances by aid of the mirrors of analogy.
* Xevertheless without the favour and influence of the
* Supreme Deity, from AVhom, as from the only Fountain and
* highest Sun of Wisdom, all truths flow down into our
' understandings inquiry would be vain ; wherefore let us
* with adoration supplicate His presence and His favour.'
With this solemn invocation he commences his description
of Creation.
The Sun is surrounded with Earths, which by their varied
attitudes towards him bring on themselves their Seasons and
their Days and Nights.
* Like an aged parent the Sun looks on these revolving
' Globes as his offspring ; he continually consults their general
* and particular interests, and although they are distant, he
' never fails to exercise over them his care and parental pro-
*tection; he cherishes tlieni with the warmth issuing from
THE PLANETS BORN PROM THE SUN. 159
immense bosom; he adonis their bo^es and membel^
* every year with beautiful clothing ; he nouiiBhcs their people
' with a constant supply of food ; he promotes the life of all
^ tlungs, and glorifies them in his radiance.
' Since then the Sun executes all the Amotions of a parent,
^ it follows from the connection and tenour of causes, that if
^ we are desirous to unfold the history of the Earth from her
^ori^n and earliest infancy, we must have recourse to the
' Sun himself: for every effect is a continuity of causes from
' the first cause ; and the cause by which anything subsists is
* continued to the cause by which it exists, since subsistence is
* a kind of perpetual existence.^*
He now invites us to contemplate the Elarth in its birth, or
in its ^g.
^ There was therefore a time like no time when the Sim
' was pr^nant, and carried in his womb the bodies of his own
'miiverse ; and when his time was come he emitted them into
'space/t
It is not to be imagined that the Sun projected from
Inmaelf the Earths as they now exist ; ^ it was impossible that
^he could carry in his burning focus such heavy and inert
^bo^es.* This was the process.
The Sun was overspread with effluvias, flowing in abun-
^•aoe and in every direction from him. These in course of
tiniK condensed, and formed a nebulous expanse, like the
wUte of an egg, in which he was enclosed.} On the outer
* Ptet I., No. 7.
t Pkrt I., No. 9.
\ He ezpUins the disappearance of Stars from this cause ; and the passage
^ bt taken as a good iUostration of Bwedenborg's habit of patting forth
**<M|ieetBres as oertamties.
' It is nuuiilest that similar incrustations have not onfrequently appeared
'^tkeStanry Heayens; for occasionally new Stars have been scon sinning
*i& great brightness, and presently by degrecA growing dim, yet after-
'vttdgfetufning to their former splendour, or altogether vanishing; which
'^•tmn ffoqf, that these Stars have been crusted over with their exhala-
I
160 SEVEN PLANETS BROUGHT FORTH.
surface of this exhalation a crust, like the shell of an oggj was
formed. The Sun thus hemmed in burned to be delivered.
His fiery energies at last gathered force to crack the shell,
which broke into as many masses as there are Planets.
For a while they lay round ' the burning bosom of their
^ father sucking, as it were, at his teats ;^ but presently he
began to cast forth other exhalations, which turned into
Aiutus, and they into Ether which wrapped itself like swad-
dling clothes about the infant Planets.
Ensphered in Ether, and through the Ether impelled by
the Sun, ' the Planets commenced to rotate and to creep, and
^ then to dance like little children in quick and short circuits
* around their father. Slowly and by degrees they moved into
* wider and wider orbits, and were thus gradually weaned from
^ direct dependence on his glowing bosom.
* Seven children, seven Planets,* were in this way bom
^ from the Sun. Each according to its size and weight receded
^ at a quicker, or a slower pace from its natal centre. Some
* tions, which have either been broken and their beams allowed to reappear, or
' unbroken continue to hide them.
< If we compare the immense magnitude of the Sun with his Planets,
' we may easily see that such a crust would suffice to make them all big a^
* they are.
' This crust or egg was the chaos so famous of old, consisting, as was
* supposed, of the elements of all things in a heap of confusion, from which
' afterwards was educed the Cosmos.' — Note D to No, 9.
* On this statement has been hung the absurd story that Swedcnborg fore-
told the existence of Uranus, the seventh Planet, discovered by Herschel in
1781. *' The Sun and Seven Planets" had been talked about ftom the mystical
significance of the number seven from the days of Pythagoras. Sometimes
the Sun was reckoned the seventh, sometimes the Moon, and some conjectured
the existence of a seventh in the inordinate space between the orbits of Mars
and Jupiter : a speculation justified in the subsequent discovery of the troop
of Planetoids. To settle the question, if there be any, that Swedenborg had
no peculiar meaning, or credit in the mention of Seven Planets, I need go no
further than a book now on my table, Carly le*s * Hittory of Frethrkk the Oreat.*
At Reinsburg, Prince Frederick's residence, writes Mr. Carlyle, ' the moat
'bridge had upon it Seven Statues representing the Seven Planets, each
' holding in her hand a glass lamp in the form of n globe.' Vol. IL, p. 69.
That was in 1739. Further on 1 shall have occasion t^) revert to this matter.
THE EARTH IN ITS BOILING DAYS. 161
'of them brought along with them from the palace of their
^ parent little orbs as servants. Our Earth brought only one
' as a handmaid^ which is called the Moon, in order that she
' might reflect the glory of the Sun upon her face in the
* night.'*
The Earth in its first state ^ was a large heap of fluent
^principles of inert Nature,' boiling furiously in the Sun's
glare. Innumerable were the changes necessary to condense
these principles to Water, Salt, Earths, &c., so that from them
again Plants and Animals might be hatched.
Two agencies are seen in all Nature, when anything is
produced — an Active and a Passive. At the beginning the
Ether, in which the World floated, was the Active, and the
World itself the Passive. From the marriage of the two
was bom the Air, which swathed the Earth like a robe,
tempered the Sun's rays, and gently pressed its surface.
The Earth then began to contract a crust, which thickened
like a scam over the continually boiling mass. In this state it
* was a perfect sphere without hills or valleys, and only divided
^ by rivers and streams, springing up from hot-baths, like warm
^ veins in a new body.' It was o%'erspread too with a dense
lust, which rose into the Air, and returned again to its surface
ai t heavy dew. * This virgin Earth was now like a new egg
^with the Mineral, Vegetable, and Animal Kingdoms hidden
^mitB substance.'
Thus the Earth hastened to her maturity. At first, whilst
^loKMt touching the Sun's disk, her Seasons were so rapid, that
^ ptsied through ages of years, which if measured by our
^ would scarcely equal as many months ; but her days and
Jttn lengthened as she retreated from her parent. Ouce she
••copied the orbit of Mercury, and once that of Venus : yea,
we is not a space between her present orbit and the Sun,
•hidi, during her retreat, she did not traverse.
• Part I.. NoH. 10 and 11 abridpfd.
M
\i\2 THE Bimi ov v^irsrvdiis^
Tlicw; nh(nt ye^rn d[ qnk RisiiiTniic "^ii—iiii In^ dm
Knrili in a perpetual Spvia^. *Tba« w^gm nu btnsiiimii»
^ wiiirU, nor the leaiit cloud bcivcuL oiEr sul :fai} mil ^pionknir
* of tlif* Hun and Star^ In perliseT: maxaoEr jmt *»vnut rhu
^ Hini iuhI Kfirth c/mspired in the w-«}rk ot CrvKidiiiL.
* It lifid hvAiu decreed from etcnucr beihrcs rhd hirrk. *ti£ du
' Hun, tliat the Earth fthould iM>t voir haadL xb^ Mwiiii' iimi
^ f'KK'*^ which Hhe lK>re in her moit ckdwcwii wmnb : bac t&ac
* Nhn Hhouhl bIho nourish, and educate tben op oi ouitfpisDibaic
* lilr in the niidHt of that perfect Spring, m. wbucn. Ais now
* hixunat4)(l.
* At tho ho^inning of this Spring the Eartk br)aic&c oicck
* nioHi lovely tlowem from the small seeds, wfakk ]aj otfiiRsc
* to Im^i* Hurfaco, Thoy were variegated in a nLTniii ajrav
* inid coloum, numerous as the delights and smiVnot' Xacon.
' Mvi^ry llowrr disputed with its neighbour the juaka « «il^>
* ^iinoi^ Ah nuuiy as were the clods of earth oo whick &
* Hun raiurd Imm luMinis were the varieties of tlormi bmorr.
* Mmimo wrrr nuirkrd with Stars picturing the Heavvtus^ wmi
* niiiih* ii^lhvtrd tho Hun flaming with his rays, and ivprrwnicd
* lii« nMnriM^;o with tlir Karth.
* t In iJMt Hoil tonnod fnmi the decay of the flowers sprang
* •iJMiilia, ntid tlhMi tivrrt )ji^rou]>ed into groves, and at last thne
' *i|t|ii<Mii>d lltiit dolioiourt garden called Paradise, through
* ^\lilili uMi iinuMnrriihlo rivors sporting in perpetual diruits
' iMMMi^) liiido \\( violrtH and evergreen glades. Such was the
» 1)1 iti xii'Pih* \\{' tlio tluMitiv of our World.'*
Ill iliit |ii»iltMMioti of tlu' Vrgi^tahle Kingdom the Sun reached
I III* liiiiM 111 \\\n iiowom. lie could maintain the Paradise,
\s ltd li liiid liiHMt I'ti'iitiMl ; hut Paradise was only a means to an
iiid lii4(iota, U\v\\n and Umsts were wanted for the garden;
(till III (hill |ttoduotioii tho Hun was unequal.
M^wmIiiiImu^ ln»iv introduces a higher force, which he
• N*w. 17 to 21.
HOW INSECTS, BIRDS AND BEASTS WERE CREATED. 1G3
detcribes as the Son of Life, or the Spiritual Sun. This Sun
18 perfectly dbtinct from the visible Sun ; they stand in the
relations of cause and effect, of master and servant, of Soul
and Body. The inner Sun is to the spiritual side of Creation
all that the outer Sun is to the material side. This Sun of
life flows immediately from the Infinite, or from God Himself,
Who alone IS, and by this Sun He animates the Souls of
Ihriiig things for the uses of their life.'*
The inner Sun now entered on his labours in the Vegetable
Kingdom, bending every plant in Paradise to the service of
his creative purpose.
In the tender leaves of herbs his rays formed eggs, which
were hatched by the heat of the outer Sun into animalcula,
worms and caterpillars, from which arose swarms of insects,
and butterflies, whose wings of gorgeous dye fanned all the
flowers in rivalry of their glories.
^ Simbs next twisted their officious twigs into nests in
* which eggs were developed, and birds of as many kinds
^flew forth as there were varieties of shrubs. Seeds were
^|nt>videntially scattered around by willing grasses for the
^ nourishment of the callow broods. The lustre of the plumage
^€f the birds irradiated the garden : some had heads crowned
^aad crested, as if with g^ms and diadems, and in their tails
'dione stars, auroras, and rainbows. 'f
Lastly, quadrupeds after their kind were bred from eggs,
Wdied and nourished with the help of the trees ; ' some
^bearing in their horns so many proofs of their descent from
'deforest.'
Oor author held the idea, that there is a correspondence
^'Hween the various orders of Plants and Animals : thus that
* Ko. 23 and Note Q. This doctrine concerning the Spiritual Sun is
■"Piited from * The Eeonomy of the Animal Kingdom,' We shall see it
^ » eaidinal place in Swedenborg'n Theolojry »b a Divine Revelation.
t .Vo. 26.
M 2
164 THE CREATIOX OF FISH AND REPTILES.
insects were bivd from herbs, birds from shrobs, and quadru-
peds from trees.
His iiotiou of ^e beasts of Paradise was not the common
one of their hanulcssness. * Some/ he says, *were fierce, and
^ delighted in nothing but blood ; some were black with gall
^ and had sullen countenances ; some were haughty with self-
^ admiration, and walked with a strut ; others were tame and
' gentle, and quietly bore the threats and haughtiness of their
* neighbours ; but others were timid and, fearful, trembling at •
^ the mere sight of fierceness ; and some were employed only
' in the pleasures of love, and were continually sportive.*
' As the Earth gave birth to creeping things, birds and
' beasts, so in the same order did the beds of rivers, clothed
* with their own vegetation, breed aquatic animals of every
* species. First, tortoises and shell-fish ; then fish with fins,
^ which are in the water what birds are in the air ; and lastly,
' amphibious reptiles and the great monsters, which walk the
* broad bottoms of the waters as their firm ground. 't
A fully garnished World now stood waiting for its King.
For his touch there was the bahiiy wannth of the Spring ; for
his smell the fragance of a wilderness of flowers ; for his mouth
fruits of exquisite flavour; for his ear the song of the birds;
for his eyes the majesty of the Heavens and the loveliness of
the Earth. All things longed for Man their Master ; for him,
' who was the first in the infinite intuition of the Deity, but
^ the last in His Creation, being at once its epitome and its
' crown.
' There was no object, not even the smallest, from which
' some resemblance of Deitv did not shine forth ; therefore all
* things languished with desire to be enjoyed by some being,
' who could return everlasting thanks to the Deity for himself
* and for them.'}
» i'art 1.. .No '.'7. + I»art I.. No. 2S ; Tart 1., Xo. 30
ADAM CAME OUT OF AN £00. 165
The Birth of Adam.
* There was a grove in the most temperate region of the
'Earth, a very Paradise in Paradise. In its midst grew a
* fruit tree, which bare a small egg, in which as in a jewel,
'Nature concealed herself with her highest powers for the
' initiament of the most consummate Body. This fruit tree
' was hence called the Tree of Life.
* This little egg was not as yet fecundated, only Nature had
^ collected into it, as into a sacred little ark, her most precious
'treasures, and provided it with such noble furniture, as a
' bride prepares for her bed chamber.
' When Nature had thus in every respect completed her
' work and gathered up her circumferences into this egg as a
' centre, then the Supreme Mind came to meet her, and infused
' into the e^ a Soul by means of concentrated rays of the
' Sun of Life.'*
At once developement began, and all the plants of the grove
proffered their service to the coming man.
' The branch of the Tree of Life, which bore the precious
' egg, unfolded into a soft and easy nest, covered with thin bark
'ind leaves. The adjacent trees instilled their sap into the
' roots of the honoured tree, rejoicing, that they were allowed
^ to be so useful. The Sun dared not approach with his hot
* beams save through the mitigation of a circle of translucent
* ipples. The air breathed with gentlest fear among the leaves ;
*tnd the young shoots of the surrounding trees knit themselves
nrto a cradle for the babe, which was lined with cotton, wafled
from the cotton trees by the helpful winds.
' Nor was Nature alone at hand, and urgent with all her
'lids; but Heaven also was favourable with its presence. Its
Qihalntants, or Spiritual Idinds, were let down for this gra-
oous purpose, that they might second and direct the offices
rf Nature : also, that they might drive away whatever would
* Part I., 'Sm. 32 and 38.
ItiU AN ANQELIC DANCE OF JOT.
^ iufetit the sacred grove; for instantly, when any fierce anintah
^ loaped its fence, they were strudc: with sudden terror, and fled
^ uwuy Into the woods, or with faltering steps dropped on their
' kiuH)s ; as if to worship their prince and lord. Pure Spiritoal
^ KHHencoH, by virtue of the power which issues firom them^
^ i*an so affect and astonish minds in Nature, that they forget
^ theinsi^Ives, and even adopt habits contrary to the habit of
' their lifo/*
As tiiuo elapsed the egg-bearing bough declined nearer
aiitl nearer the cotton cradle, and at the appointed hour the
hahy-muii erueked his slicll, ahd begun to breathe the air.
The Spiritual Minds or Essences, (a kind of Intellectual
(lases, which at this tune was Swedenborg's idea of Angek,)
^ iuiauiinously ivsolvcd,' he says, ^ to institute a festival in
^ (*elel»rati(m of Adam's birth-day, the last of Creation and
* the tirst o( the Unman Kace. Wherefore they devised a
* new spDPt called Panidisiacal, never before sported in the
' I heavens; hnt ni>t bv dancing such as terrestrial nymphs
' pnrsne. The sport consisted of revolutions and mutual in-
^ rinxes in circuits and spiral windings, like so many labyrinths
' to our sight. They ran up from a circumference to a centre
* in sueh a way, that every one felt himself to be the very
' imnoht of the centre. Nor was this all. Ravished with
^ delight they broke out fi\>m the centre into a new rotation,
' luid then hack again in such a way, that they no longer
' ennilated what is perpetual, but what is infinite. They felt
* in tins sport not as if thev were many, but as if they were
* one ; and the delight of each communicated, and every one
* hnrnetl with the joy of all. This action and their ecstasy
' Hoo(le<l the brain of the Babe, so that his lungs forgot to
' breathe in eonse<[uenee of the festive stupor and lovely
* swoon of the spirits in the fibres. The Babe and themselves
* they presented to the Supreme Deity, Who hailed them with
» l*«rl I . Xu.-. ;jr> and 37
ADAM SUCKING AND CKAWLING. 167
^ His grace and favour. Then bursting forth under the
* fervour of this Divine honour they again unwound them-
' selves, and twined and gUded into one another in marveUous
* fluxions.'*
Naked and beautiful as a god the Babe reclined on his
downy couch sucking the ends of branches of the Tree of Life,
which nourished him with milk ; ^ sometimes lying on his back
* whilst the milk dropped straight into his open mouth.' When
he slept his little hands were raised, closely folded, towards
Heaven. By and bye he crept out of his bed, and laid hold
of whatever came in his way ; but he could come to no harm ;
for ' Spiritual Minds stood near ready to provide for every
* movement of this little son of the Supreme Governor.' He
grasped the flowers, whose colours pleased his eye, and their
odours his nose ; and his ear awoke to the voice of singing
birds ; and nothing gratified his senses, but what was whole-
some and helpful to the growth of his Body and Mind.
' All these things were done under the influence of the
* Supreme Deity. From His power all act. He is all in all,
* the one Life ; from His Life we live, and living, act.'f
The Boy could not walk, ' but crawled about as a reptile,
' which his Soul observed with a mixture of concern and
' indignation, and used all her endeavours to lift him and set
' him on his feet.
* Intent on this purpose no means were wanting ; for the
' Soul from the centres and sanctuaries of all the Arts and
* Sciences conceives her operations, and subdues the things of
* Nature to her ends.
* To get the Boy to walk his Soul contrived various, but
* at the same time lovely, tricks. She bent his eyes on
* beautiful fruits hanging aloft, and inspired in him a desire
^ to touch them, adding also strength to his muscles ; and in
* like manner she filled him with a longing to eat grapes,
* Part I.. Nu. 42. f Tart I., No. 43.
-0> Ju^^M L* lAteHT TO WALK.
• whiKii aunj: ituri- oa tbe Tines^ that by dinging to the
• bnin<:ii»fs ':it rnfgi: IiR hizndelf npvaurda.
' ^*«^vt^>cul i.Tt^ail ;tl»} ^ied their divine canning to these
'■■:*:iv:L^iiz< }£ tibf S.»aL and by feigned delights sported
• vi'ji jii.i ,-ln:ii::iT»ea:eti him. At one time, they represented
• ^b«.>vte iiLi^ aeihi 4 p^fmient Paradise wreathed with garhindft
'jji«i U'.'iwx^ivs: at azK»€hier« thev led him to think, that he
• siw iiifnitsw Ji» :««.' oiany little brothers, winged and flying
• rApi'i V. ^V> h«- 5pnuu: np to play m-ith them, they retreated,
' jii'i thtfu the *. Tie ail ui^ie him imagine, that he also had wings
• whv^n:fwirii t«.» tiv after them.
' F'.»r :he luojibitant* olf Heaven, before pure eyes and
• Mill U fi^tr frijiu earthly love«« are aMe to represent anything,
• Liud at the same time to enkindle in those Minds any ardour
• au'l attouti«.»u thev please.*
' By t!iei>e s^vrtive blaudlshiueuts and delightful fasdna-
' :l:*us oiir iutaut iu the space of a few days was set upon his
• tcvr, aul walked er^vt with his liace turned upwards to the
• Stiirry Heaveu ; uor was he willing to let it down again,
' t'xv^\*pt wheu he wished to eat for the sake of recruiting his
• Ikm.Iv/t
Thus fur SwedeuU.>rg's book has some fascination notwith-
^tiUldIll^ a heavily florid style; but having, with the due
eiitorprisi' and loug sutteriug of a biojjrapher, gone over its
sub^tjuoiit pages, which descriln* the education of Adam, I can
advise no roiulcr U^ut on pleasure to adventure across its dry
;uul Siiudv flats.
He dosi*rilH»s AJaiirs Mind as an Olympus in the Bndn.
In its highest or iinnust chambers dwells the Soul ; in its
inidtlle chainlK^rs Intelligences or Wisdoms, who he styles
the SouPs daughters ; and in its lowest chambers Sciences or
Knowledges, who are 8t»r>-ants to the gmls alH>ve.
* Thih sentence ha^ h iiuiiked importance in cimuoction with Swi'dcnborg
liiiu.-clt.
ADAM^B EDUCATION. 169
These taculties in Adam's head he sets debating in
Gompanj with Angels or pure Spiritual Essences, his Soul
exceeding the others in volubiUt j ; instructing Adam in the
bieaaednees, which attends the rigid subordination of the lower
powers to the higher ; and of the danger of the Senses, with
die help of the servile Sciences, putting their rightful mis-
tresses, Wisdoms and Intelligences, under foot, and throwing
the whole mental Olympus into anarchy and darkness.
For instance Adam felt, that he lived of himself as an
independent existence ; and the Sciences in his Mind, which
were the mere registers of his sensations, were quite ready
to attest, that his feebng was the fact. Here however Wisdom
intervened and proved to him, that whilst it was necessary
and inevitable, that he should ,^df self-existent and independent,
yet, that the reality was the exact reverse of his feeling ; for
he might be aware, that, but for the play of Nature on his
Senses he could never have attained consciousness, and but for
the instant influx and presence of the Deity in his Soul, he
would not abide in life for a moment. To harbour then the
notion of his independence would be to yield himself a prey
to the deepest delusion.
Swedenborg thus gives us an idea of Man as a Veil of
Ignorance hanging between God and Nature. His Soul is
leicribed as inhabited by God, made wise with His wisdom
^ knowing all things. In proportion as this Veil is pierced
•wl God and Nature meet, Man becomes consciously intelli-
pQt Adam^s education consisted in making holes through
^ Veil and permitting the Soul and Nature to flow together.
The second part of the ^ De Cvltu et Amove Bei^ is not
^^ji found bound up with the first, and copies of it are rarer
ttdmore difficult to obtain. There seems no reason for its
*q>*ratc publication, as it is merely a brief continuation of
^he story, describing the birth of Eve, her education, and
luuriage to Adam.
170 ABOUT EVE AND HER EGG.
There was a grove distant some Airlongs from Adam^s,
and its perfect duplicate. One evening Adam strolled into
this grove, and night coming on he lay down to sleep under
its Tree of Life. In a dream a beautiftil nymph appeared to
him, and moved by passion he sought to fold her in his arms,
when like a light cloud she glided away. ' In attempting to
^ catch her he so irritated the parts about his thorax, that one
' of his ribs seemed to him to leap out of its place, the nerves
^ being so strained by the action of his mind and the blood in
' the breast being put in commotion by the heart. After some
* eflFort he seemed to himself to catch her, and covered her lips
* and cheeks with kisses. At this moment, when she appeared
' more beautiful than ever, he suddenly awoke, and found, to
' his grief, that he had been dreaming.
* He did not know, that the apple-tree under which he
' rested bore the egg from which his future wife was to be
* bom, and that it was her picture he had courted so eagerly
^n his sleep; that the branch at his breast, lying in his
^ bosom, was what he had embraced in his arms ; and that
* the very egg itself was what he had pressed with his lips
^ and his kisses ; and in so doing had infused into it a living
* Soul from his own.'*
He left the grove sorrowing for the beautiful maid he had
seen and lost, and quite unconscious of the happy deed he had
done.
In due season Eve was hatched, and was watched over by
Celestial Essences just as Adam had been ; and by them she
was instructed in all the mysteries of Swedenborgian meta-
physics and physiology relating to the Olympus of Soul,
Wisdoms, Intelligences and Knowledges, the cortical and
cineritious substances of the Brain, the Animal Spirits,
Nerves, Veins, Fibres, Forms, Vortices, et cetera^ to which
with an awful audacity our author assures us, ' Eve listened
♦ Part II., No. 87.
THE MEETING OF ADAM AND EYE. 171
^with rapturous delight' and asked for more in sentences
* of this portentous pattern — * I pray you instruct me by
*your skilful eloquence, whether or not Creation descends
* from the centre in perpetual spirals, and in its descent ex-
* panda itself and grows.' Truly poor Eve, at that rate far
excelled any of her daughters in a London drawing-room in
patience and politeness. The Celestial Essences make answer
in corresponding lingo, which Eve with unabated courage and
hypocrisy is said to have ' snatched up with greedy ear.'
Finally, we come to her meeting with Adam, and with
a deep sense of relief escape from the weary windiness of the
Heavenly Essences.
One day the Essences opened out to her about Adam
telling her, " He is not far oflf ; we see him, but he does not
^ see us ; he is looking towards thee, so turn thy head aside,
**and let him come to thee, and court thee with humble
"^ entreaty. Thou art now to be the partner of his life and
^ bed ; he is assigned to thee by Heaven ; this is the day of
**your marriage, and the hour of your union is at hand."
^ Connubial Essences at this instant drew her hair, which
^hung in ringlets round her neck, through a golden circlet and
^(listened it in a knot ; and they placed a crown of diamonds on
'her head ; and adorned her as a bride waiting for her husband
' with a few simple ornaments suited to her radiant beauty.
^Adam bad long been trying to re-discover the grove
^ where he had experienced his ravishing vision; and his
^fiulores, and his desire for the beauteous maid began to cloud
%life with restlessness and care. This happy day in pur-
' tmg his search he spied the Angel of his dream in the very
'fltth and exdumed, ^' I see clearly that she is mine, for she is
***from my own bosom, and from my own life." '
Eve, ignorant of the meaning of that marriage, of which
^ Essences had spoken, caught a glimpse of Adam. In-
*<»ntly a blush suffused her face, and her life sparkled into a
^'^ge and delicious flame of love, and tinged like a rose
172 ROMANCE OK REAUXr?
she stood a naked image of celestial grace. The Essences
beckoned Adam on ; they touched, embraced, entered into
converse, and became the parents of all living.*
"Of course Swedenborg wrote all this confessedly as
" fiction," says the reader. There is no sign that he did ;
nay, my own conviction is, that he believed every word of it
as sincerely as he ever believed anything. We have noticed
his proneness in * The Principia^ ' The Infintt^^ and * The
* Economy of the Animal Kingdom ' to set forth his fancies in
full detail as certainties ; and * The Worship and Love of Ood *
is only an ampler development of the same speculative prac-
tice. Many who will read with composure and admiration his
account of the manufacture of the Elements from Points of
Force, and of Earth from Water, will start appalled at the
notion, that he was in earnest in describing the creation of
Plants, Insects, Birds, Beasts and Fishes, and above all of
Adam and Eve; but there is no reason why the Intuition|
which could evolve the story of the former should hesitate
about the latter. We are as yet on the verge of the world of
wonders drawn from the depths of the Swcdenborgian Soul,t
* Part II., Nos. 109 and 110.
t In deaUng with the theory of * The Prindpia,' and * The Worship and
^ Lave of Ood^ Canning and Frere's exquisite parody, *The Lotos of the
Triangles,* written in ridicule of Dr. Darwin's * Love$ of the Planit^^ has
often come to mind ; and had the wits read Swedenhorg they could scarcely
have quizzed him in some particulars more happily.
Darwin considered, that Lines were generated hy the motion of Points,
Planes hy the lateral motion of Lines, and Solids from Planes by a similar
process, and that in Matter so produced six filaments commenced to operate
and wrought out organized Nature : hence sing the satirists —
* But chief, thou Nurse of the Didactic Muse,
' Divine Nonsensia, all thy soul infuse ;
' The charms of Secants and of Tangents tell,
* How Loves and Graces in an Angle dwell ;
* How slow progressive Points protract the Liiie,
* As pendent spidera spin the filmy twine ;
CANNING AND FRERE ON CREATION. 173
' How lengthened Iamm^ impetaons sweeping round,
' Spread the wide Planer and mark its circling bound ;
' How Plane$, their subetance with their motion grown,
' Form the huge Cuhtj the Cylinder, the Cone.
* We may therefore conceive the whole of our present Unirerse to have
*been orig^inally concentrated in a single Point; we may conceire this
'primeral Point, or /mfiefifiii taliens of the UniTerse, CYolving itself by its own
' energiea, to have moved forwards in a straight Line, aul infinitum, till it
' grew tired ; after which the right Line, which it had generated would
* b^;in to put itself in motion in a lateral direction, describing an Area of
'infinite extent. This Area, as soon as it became conscious of its own
' existencey would begin to ascend or descend, according as its specific gravity
'might determine it, forming an immense solid Space filled with vacuum,
' and capable of containing the present existing universe.
' Space being thus obtained, and presenting a suitable nidus or receptacle
' for the generation of chaotic matter, an immense deposit of it would be
'gndnally accumulated; after which, the filament of fire being produced
*!■ the chaotic mass by an idiosyncrasy, or self-formed habit analogous to
'fermentation, explosion would take place; suns would be shot from the
'central chaoa; planets firom suns; and satellites from planets. In this state
'of thing* the filament of organization would begin to exert itself in those
* independent masses, which in proportion to their bulk exposed the greatest
'tnrfaoe to the action of light and heat. This filament, after an infinite
' teriea of ages, would begrin to ramify, and its viviparous ofispring would
'fivernfy their forms and habits, so as to accommodate themselves to
'the Tariooa incunabula^ which Nature had prepared for them. Upon this
'view of things it seems highly probable, that the first effort of Nature
' terminated in the production of Vegetables, and that these being abandoned
'to their own energies, by degrees detached themselves from the surface of
'the earth, and supplied themselves with wings and feet, according as their
'different propensities determined them in favour of aerial and terrestrial
'extstenoe. Others, by an inherent disposition to society and civilization,
'nd by a stronger effinrt of volition, would become Men. These in time
'would restrict themselves to the use of their htJid feet; their tails would
' gndoaUy mb off by sitting in their caves or huts as soon as they arrived at
'i domesticated state; they would invent language and the use oi fire, with
'ov present and hitherto imperfect system of society. In the meanwhile, the
* /Wi and Alga, with the Corallines and Madrepores, would transform thera-
'ntvesintojCfA and would gradually populate all the submarine portion of
'the globe.'— TAe ^fifi-/aco6tfi, No. 23, 16 April, 1798.
( 174 )
CHAPTER XVI.
A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW.
We have now gone over Swedenborg'a doings, so far as they
are known, up to 1743-45, or his 55th year, and ere we pass
the gate, that leads to another country, to new scenes and new
pursuits, let us pause awhile, and take a glance across the
ground over which we have travelled.
If Swedenborg had died at this juncture, it is not likely,
that his name would have been known beyond the catalogues
of libraries where some of his volumes chance to be stored. In
his own day his writings met with very little notice. Last
century, to an extent much greater than in this, literary
celebrity was dependent upon social influence, and of social in-
fluence Swedenborg had little or none. When he had written
a book in Stockholm he hastened to Amsterdam or Leipsic to
print it. He presented a copy to a learned man here, and a
learned man there, who sent him a letter of thanks and praises,
and tlien probably shelved and forgot it. This done, all else
he left to the enterprise of his bookseller, and relapsed into
the solitude of business, study and travel. Had he been a
professor in some German University, and lived under the
stimulus of controversy he might have divided philosophic
empire with Christian Wolf. It is true, he was bountifully
aided for a season by the purse and patronage of the Duke
of Brunswick, but to keep writings like his before the eye of
the world required persistent personal activity, and the service
of a clique of admirers as claqueurs.
The practical parts of his ' Opera Phtlosophica et Mine-
swedekborq's literary reception. 175
^ralia^ were not altogether neglected. The chapters on the
converuon of iron into steel were reprinted at Strasburg in
1737 ; and the treatise on iron was translated into French by
Bouchu, and published at Paris in 1762 in the magnificent
^ Description des Arts et Metiers f and Cramer in his ^Elements
^ofAeArt of Assaying^ owns, that Swedenborg has * given the
^ best accoonts, not only of the methods and newest improve-
^ments in metallic works in all places beyond the seas, but
^ also of those in England and the American colonies.'
Very pleasant also at this day it is to find Dr. Percy
reviving and indicating Swedenborg^s peculiar claim to the
attention of metallurgists. He writes —
^ The metaUurgical works of this remarkable man seem to
* be very imperfectly known — at least they are rarely, if ever,
* quoted ; and yet none are, in my judgment, more worthy of
' the attention of those interested in the history of metallurgy.
*They form two tolerably thick folio volumes, copiously
^ illustrated with copper-plate engravings, and magnificently
Sprinted.'*
Swedenborg was unfortunate in writing in Latin. Phi-
losophy bad largely passed out of the hands of professional
students, to whom of old it had been an exclusive possession ;
and it was cultivated by men and women, who either did not
read Latin, or read it imder difficulty and without delight.
Berkeley's idealism. Hartley's vibrations, Butler's Analogy^
Hume's scepticism, Beid's common sense, Jonathan Edwards's
predestination, Condillac's sensationalism, Kant's ' Critique
</ Pure BeasorC were all introduced to the world about
Swedenborg's time ; and unquestionably, they all owed much
of dieir acceptance and repute to their promulgation in living
tongues.
Whilst it would be idle to speculate upon the popularity
vlttdi Swedenborg might have attained had he endured the
• 'MHaUurgy,' by John Percy, M.D., Part I., p. 439. Londcm. 1861
i
176 9irCI>E!rB0«&*:$ FJLKLTKC
critical frictMn of Loodofi or Ptoia^ aai knftttii k»ir tojhUneap
Iiim:3elf to the tastes and undaataafa^ of tbeir Blefanr and
Mientific coteries^ we maj yet aaeert^ tkat kai kb wrhii^
ad tbej exist been pohfehed in Ki^fafc or Fiendi h k not
Ukelr, that tber would hare liad anv Terr cnneat socceagw TlirT
embodied no marked, nor dear, nor new. nor extnane doctrine.
Berkelev, Harder, and CondiDac set forth prinopleac which
could be laid Indd of^ or at least goaaped about by cmy-
bodj; bat it would hare been difficnh to formulate what
Swedenborg tangtit* Wolf had anticipated him. by his own
admission, in much that was pecnliar in * Tke Primcipiai ** Tie
^ Infinite^ was little more than a promise and a gnesi : and he
bli^ted and superseded ^ The Eoof^my of At Amimal Kmydoany*
almost as soon as puUiahed, by his Prol(^;ue to ^ Tie Amimtal
KtnffdomJ*
From a literary point of view these writings of Sweden-
borg merit but slight praise. They are not wanting in passages,
which may be read with some pleasure ; but as a whole they
are diffuse, iterative, and confused to an oppressive degree.
There is frequently no more reason that you should not com-
mence reading firom the middle of one of his chapters than
that you should firom the beginning ; and it is often only after
much wandering over his pages, and bringing their distant
parts into contact, that you succeed in mastering his drift and
meaning. I should suppose he wrote rapidly and without
revision ; and thus he punished his readers for his own ease*
Wlien he does take pains and attempts eloquence, his style
becomes heavy and formal and his imagery lumbering. He
lacked, in short, that fCre art, which marshals ideas in such
fine order, that they march fi-om the mind of the teacher into
the easy occupation of the mind of the taught.
Forgotten as soon as published Swedenborg's writings
anterior to 1745 suffered resurrection in English in 1845.
In that year ' The Swedenborg Association ' was formed in
London for their revival. Translations of his several works
ATTEMPTED REVIVAL OF SWEDENBORO. 177
were made under the reverent and scholarly editorship of
Dr, Wilkinson, the Rev. Augustus Clissold, and Mr. Stnitt*
Nothing was left undone to give them a fair chance of life ;
bat the event proved, that they had been raised from the
grave to endure the pain of a second death. The editions of
a thousand copies after nearly twenty years of advertising
remain unexhausted. The fervour of the Associates soon
died out as the public remained deaf to all their cries for
attention. Purchasers tried to read tiic glorified volumes, but,
making little progress in their tough and dry substance, placed
them in the book-case to await that more convenient season,
which seldom comes to books once tasted and set aside. Beyond
the translators,! question whether more than a dozen people ever
struggled through ]tfr. Clissold's edition of The Prtnctpia^ or
Dr. Wilkinson^s of * The Aniinal Kingdoni,'* Amongst many
ready to swear to their supreme excellence, I have searched
in vain to find more than two or three, who, on pressure,
coald own to any intimate familiarity with their contents.
In speaking in this strain of Swedenborg's writings,
previous to 1745, 1 am aware, that I am nmning counter to
■ome opinions of which Mr. Emerson has been the popular
exponent; and perhaps I cannot deal more fairly with my
mder than by quoting some of his statements.*
* Swedenborg,* says he, * printed these scientific works in
^tke ten years from 1734 to 1744, and they remained from
^ that time ne^ected : and now, after their century is complete,
'ke has at last found a pupil in Dr. Wilkinson, a philosophic
^critic, with a co-equal vigour of understanding and imagina-
'tion comparable only to Lord Bacon^s, who has produced his
^Xaster^s buried books to the day, and transferred them, with
* every advantage, from their forgotten Latin into English, to
• From hin l^ectnre on * Stnedeuborg, the Mystic,^ which he delivered in
^vioiBi towns in thin country in 1847. It is printed, in his volume entitled
* Miprnieniatir^ iV>i»/ m. wifdely circnlated book.
X
178 EMERSON ON SWEDENBOSO.
^ go round the worid In oar commercial and conquering
^ tongue. This startling re-appearance of Swedenborg, after
^ a hundred years, in his pupil, is not the least remarkaUe
^ fact in his history. Aided, it is said, by the munificence of
^ Mr. CUssold, and also by his literary skill, this piece of
*• poetic justice is done. The admirable preliminary discourses
^ with which Dr. Wilkinson has enriched these volumes, throw
^ all the contemporary Philosophy of England into the shade,
^ and leave me nothing to say on their pn^>er grounds.
^ As happens in great men, Swedenborg seemed by the
variety and amount of his powers, to be a composition of
several persons, — like the giant fruits, which are matured in
gardens by the union of four or five single blossoms. His
frame is on a large scale, and possesses the advantages of size.
^ His youth and tnuning could not £bu1 to be extraordinary.
Such a boy could not whistle or dance, but goes grubbing
into mines^and mountains, piying into Chemistry and Optics,
Physiology, Mathematics and Astronomy, to find images fit
for the measure of his versatile and capacious brain. He was
a scholar from a child.
^ The genius, which was to penetrate the Science of the
Age with a far more subtle Science ; to pass the bounds of
space and time; venture into the dim Spirit-Realm, and
attempt to establish a new Religion in the World, — began
its letters in quarries and forges, in the smelting-pot and
crucible, in ship-yards and dissecting-rooms.
* No one man is, perhaps, able to judge of the merits of his
works on so many subjects. One is glad to learn that his
books on Mines and Metals are held in the highest esteem by
those, who understand these matters. It seems, that he anti-
cipated much Science of the nineteenth century ; anticipated,
in Astronomy, the discovery of the seventh Planet,* — ^but.
• ThiR we have alreadv f«hewn to be a minUke.
EMERflON ON 8WEDENB0RQ. 179
^ imliAppily, not also of the eighth ; anticipated the views of
^ modem Astronomy in regard to the generation of Earths by
^ the Sun ; in Magnetism, some important experiments and
^oondumons of later students; in Chemistry, the Atomic
^ Theory ; in Anatomy, the discoveries of Schlichting, Munro,
^ and Wilson ; and first demonstrated the office of the Lungs.*
^ A colossal Soul, he lies alm>ad on his times, uncompre-
^ bended by them, and requires a long focal distance to be
^ seen ; suggests, as Aristotle, Bacon, Selden, Humboldt, that
^ a certain vastness of learning, or quasi omnipresence of the
* Human Soul in Nature is possible One of the masto-
* dons of literature, he is not to be measured by whole colleges
* of or^linary scholars. His stalwart presence would flutter
* the gowns of a university. Our books are false by being
^fragmentary; their sentences are bon mots^ and not parts
^of natural discourse; or childish expressions of surprise or
^pleasure in Nature. But Swedenborg is systematic, and
* rmpective of the world in every sentence : all the means are
* orderly given ; his faculties work with astronomic punctuality ;
*tnd his admirable writing is pure firom all pertness or egotism.
* Malpighi's maxim, that " Nature exists entire in leasts,"
*tt Swedenborg^s favourite thought. This fruitful idea ftir-
^nishes a key to every secret. What was too small for the
*«7e to detect was read by the aggregates; what was too
•Wge by the units. There is no end to the application of
* &e thought.
' The doctrine is a very ancient one. Hippocrates taught,
*tkat the brain was a gland; Leucippus, that the atom may
*kc known by the mass; and Plato, that the macrocosm may
'he seen in the microcosm.
* Thus waa he apt for cosmology, for size was of no account
*to Irim. In the magnetism around an atom of iron, he saw
• For moiit of thciw aMertUms I have been unable to discover even a
of procff.
N 2
180 KINGSLEY ON SWEDENBOBO.
the power, which sends Sun and Planets spinning in their
courses.
' The ^Economy of the Animal Kingdom^ is one of those
books, which by the sustained dignity of thinking is an
honour to the human race. He had studied spars and metals
to some purpose. His varied and solid knowledge makes his
style lustrous with points and shooting spicula of thought,
and resembling one of those winter mornings when the air
sparkles with crystals.
* The ^Animal Kingdom^ is a book of wonderful merits.
It was written with the highest end — to put Science and the
Soul, long estranged from each other, at one again. It was
an Anatomist's account of the Human Body in the highest
style of poetry. Nothing can exceed the bold and brilliant
treatment of a subject, usually so dry and repulsive.'
The ascription to Swedenborg of various scientific discov-
eries has grown somewhat conmion, and it is to be regretted,
that Mr. Emerson, instead of giving the notion currency had
met it with denial. Mr. Eingsley affords a striking instance
of the facility with which popular writers receive, enlarge and
propagate a fiction of this kind once set afloat. In a review
of Vaughan's ^ Hours %jo%ih the Myatics^^* he remarks —
' The world only knows Swedenborg as a dreaming fidse
' prophet, forgetting that even if he was that, he was also a
' sound and severe scientific labourer to whom our modem
^physical science is most deeply indebted.''
Now if Swedenborg is to be protected from unjust censure
he must likewise be saved from indiscreet praise. The daw,
which decked itself in peacock's feathers had its own plucked
out along with the peacock's ; and untrue eulogy is certain to
provoke untrue depreciation. ITiat ' our modem physical sdence
♦ In 'Frmer>9 MagasdM' for September, 1856. Professor Kingslej has
■ince reprinted the article, including this passage, in his volumes of collected
8WEDENB0KG A THEORIST. 181
^U most deeply indebted to Swedenborg' is an assertion, for
which there is not a tittle of evidence ; and it is surprising, that
a Cambridge Professor should hazard so wild an assertion.
Swedenborg's scientific works fell as dead from the press last
century as they did at their attempted revival in this. Whether
the pages of * The Princfpid' and ' The Animal Kingdom '
may not harbour many a hint, which like pollen falling on the
duly prepared scientific mind might issue in precious fruit, I
cannot say ; but that we are without record of any scientific
fruit, great or small, which derives its parentage from Swcden-
borg may be safely affirmed.
Swedenborg was not a direct scientific observer; but a
scientific speculator ; he did not experiment much, but reasoned
on the experiments of othera. His complaint indeed was, that
mere observation had advanced far ahead of doctrine, and, that
men of science had lost themselves in a maze of miscellaneous
and unconnected facts. His constant purpose was, to reduce
their chaos of knowledge to wisdom, and to evolve therefrom
some doctrine, which might be of comfort and use to mankind.
Swedenborg is therefore to be thought of, and estimated as a
Theorist ; and, save as a Theorist, he shows no claim whatever
to distinction. It would be a tedious, and too surely an unread-
able paper, which should discuss Swedenborg's theories and
ihcw wherein he agreed with, differed from, and excelled the
Pkiiosophers of his day, how far his various notions seem to us
loond and unsound, and how far at accord and discord with
Us own later views. For ourselves we confess, that our
interest in these books of his is wholly biographic, and, that
£d we not care for Swedenborg, nothing could have tempted
OS into their depths. With few and meagre details of his life
tkis fiur, we track his every sentence for some knowledge of
the man, and are thankful for the slightest hints, which help
Qi to realize his character.
Betioent and impersonal are these writings; for reticent and
cautions was Swedenborg. He wanted none of his father's
[
182 SWEDENBOUa PECUUAKLY PKUDENT.
assurance ; but bred iu a better school his tongue did not wag
so freely, and he knew how to keep himself and his affSurs
decently in the back-ground. He was clearly a man self-
possessed, prudent, wary. He would not speak readily ; but
when silence was once broken, copiously, slowly and impres-
sively. A slight impediment in his speech would be a secondary
reason for deliberate utterance.
A good business man, a punctual, orderly and careful
Assessor, he without doubt was. He understood mining and
smelting thoroughly, and in all his writings and manuscripta
we observe the signs of a practised clerkly hand. In the
matter of money he was well off by inheritance more than by
office ; and on him Polonius^s counsel —
* Neither a borrower, nor a lender bo ;
' For loan oft loses both itself and friend,
' And borrowing dolls the edge of husbandry' —
would be wasted, as advice to Swedenborg to be Swedenboig.
In all his concerns we have a sense of shrewdness and thrift ;
not of parsimony, but of a wise economy, which wasted nothing,
and spared nothing. His habits were simple and orderly, and
of any extravagance in speech or conduct we may safely con-
jecture he was uniformly guiltless. He confesses, as we shall
shortly see, his passion for women ; but that too, we must
believe, was subordinate to his prudence.
Of wit and hiunour we nowhere find in him any trace. No
jest and no playfuhiess ever enliven his pages. Of poetic
imagination he is equally destitute. Perhaps his many
theories culminating in his ' Warship and Love of Ood ' may
be quoted in disproof; but surely ineffectually; for, granting
that Nature had a beginning, In what more prosaic manner
coidd that beginning be conceived than in his description ?
He had unquestionably great constructive power, but it was
the power of the mechanist, and not of the poet or artisC
Again, we find in him no vehemence, anger, nor hatred ; no
sarcasm, contempt, nor fretfulncss. He has of course his
swedenbobg's love of truth. 183
likes and dinlikes, or rather his assents and dissents, but they
are all manifested in a placid and passionless style. Of envy
he appears to have been utterly free ; a malignant or a flippant
sentence we shall in vain look for through all his books. If
he desired fame he never left the path of good sense to look
for it ; and of any eccentricity, or any clap-trap for the sake of
attention or admiration he was simply incapable. A man
thus guarded and correct, with a small heart under the
government of a large head, may command respect wherever,
ke moves ; but the joys and sorrows of true human fellowship
he can never feel. It is therefore without surprise, that
1 discover no friendships in Swedenborg's life. His most
intimate intercourse appears to have been with his brother-
in-law, Archbishop Benzelius, and that never went deeper than
a mild inteUectual regard.
Unloved in his lifetime it would be as hopeless as it would
be insincere in me to try to conjure up any sentimental affection
for him a century after his death. My admiration of Swedeu-
borg is wholly intellectual. He seems to me one of the finest
qpeeimens of the Achromatic Mind, working through perceptive
foculties of singular size and deamess, that biography reveab.
To use one of his own phrases, the very root of his being was
a Love of Truth. Truth, for its own sake, he sought through
all his years with a placid deep-flowing and irresistible
persistency. The desire for fame, or gain, or vengeance has
provoked many a head into brilliant action; but in Swedenborg
nidi passions were either weak or dormant. His intellectual
powers were set in motion by the gentle fire of that Love,
whose single joy is the knowledge of the Truth.
From his cradle he was a seeker, ^ which sect,^ says Oliver
Cromwell) ^ is next best to that of a finder.' His childhood
was full of queries as to what were the ties between God
and Man, but school and college turned his eyes out on
Nature, and left not an inkling of the hidden pietist and
theologian. He turned his whole energies on mathematics,
184 HIS STYLE OF WORK.
mechanics, chemistry, geology, metallurgy, magnetiffln, as-
tronomy, and a thousand devices and speculations connected
therewith. This lasted until his forty-fifth year, when
contact with Philosopher Wolf set him dreaming about the
Infinite, and about the Human Soul. Dreary Wolf and his
school were content to speculate on the Soul as * the inmost
* and subtilest part of the Body ;' but if it be so, said the more
practical Swedenborg, Let me search it out, and let me
demonstrate it to the very senses. From that time, 1 734, he
gave himself no rest for eleven years, to 1745, in a chase after
the Soul, and though his quest was in its end necessarily
bootless, vast was the knowledge gained in the course of the wild
adventure. He read himself up in Anatomy with a vigour,
thoroughness and intelligence, of which his books and manu-
scripts are the amazing proofs; and these records of eleven years
of arduous scholarship, commenced and carried on in middle
life, better perhaps than any other of his performances manifest
to a discerning eye, the easy and gigantic grasp of his
imperial intellect.
In Swedenborg's works we do not find delicacy but power,
not finish but size. We behold in him a Titan and no Apollo.
All that he did was large, rough, and full of gaps. Not any
of his doctrines are rounded into completeness, or fortified so
as to answer, or resist the aggression of ordinary questions. I
do not say, that many of his positions may not be held and
defended ; but if they are, it must be with the aid of lines
supplementary to his own. The fact is, that the truths he saw
he was as unable to set forth in fair logical, as in fair rhetorical
trim. He tumbled out his ideas instead of setting them out;
or more correctly, he tried to set them out, but with a success
little greater than if he had tumbled them. Something of
this disorder and incompleteness may be charged against his
self-satisfaction and his solitary life. He was content to test
his work by his own eye alone, and neither sought nor cared
to have the verdict of others.
LABOUR AND TIME ANU PATIENCE. 185
His years tfans far show a giant's labour, but done in a
gi«it'. time and with a giant's composure. There was nothing
of precocity, fever, or haste in any of his doings. Like the
oak, if he was a giant he grew slowly. He liad done little up
to 1722, his 34th year, beyond pamphleteering, in which he
aired a few of his more ambitious devices and speculations.
From that date he lay quiet for eleven years, at the end of
which he broke, and amply accounted for his long rilence, in
the three folios of the ^ Opera Philosophica et Mlneralia.'*
After that he again lay quiet for seven years, at the end of
which he commenced to put forth his studies on the ' Animal
KinffdomJ* These were indeed heavy works, but we see they
were executed in ample and correspondent time.
Although none of these writings may have any message or
peculiar interest for us, yet whoever studies them in the series
of their production cannot fall to observe a mind growing
dowly and surely and winning increase of strength and insight
Tear by year whilst working inwards from Stones and Iron
through Flesh and Blood to Soul and Spirit. I have
beard them called with some pertinence Swedenborg^s copy-
books. As such they evidence an industrious and valiant scholar,
who glorified himself in no achievement, but ever used the last
won as a stepping stone to something higher. No applause, no
fifSculty overcome ever tempted him into the delusion, that he
bad attained final excellence. He sought a settlement on the
rock of Truth, and on nothing else could he long rest. Often
in sight of a mere fog-island he thought he discerned a place
of rest ; more than once he commenced to build on tlie sand ;
Vit he was ever first to discover his mistake and arise and
itnew his quest for an everlasting foundation. Of this single-
Itttrtedneas there is no finer instance than the courage with
wbich he discredited and set aside ^ the anguish and the sweat
*of years ' in the case of his * Economy of the Animal King^
'doin^ and commenced his task anew in the ' Animal King^
"d*inu The very simplicity and imconsciousncss with which
186 TH£ :«P1SITVAI. SrSDH^TIME.
the deed was done has biddoi iiB gnadnir Aom ihtrnt who
luight have notked i^ had it been dlKted vitb «vl of tnunpets,
or vaingloriouB iiii9^rer&
In these days when Swedenbor]^ was wiitii^ the * Amimml
Kingdontj' it is evident, that his mind was entcrii^ into its
summer time. There is a richness and a myotic priMniae
in many of his sentences, which we take for sore agns, that
the beams of the Heavenly Son had b^:an to strike through
the air of his Sool, and that the rewards at the patient cnltnrs
of more than half a century were nigh. Somedmes hid in a
note, as it were under leaves, we come npon some choice
thoughts, which remind us more of the gnpes of Eshool than
the herbs and the onions of Egypt.
Arrested in the midst of his studies of the Human Body
Swcdenborg arose to oUier duties, and left the writings of his
early and middle life in the dust of forgetfulness, never more
quoting, or alluding to them. So complete was his alence,
that some who were the acquaintances of hLs old age appear
to have been ignorant, that he was ever anything but a
theological author.
As Swedenborg's after-career was wholly that of a
Spiritualist, questions naturally arise as to what were his
religious opinions previous to the time of change.
Wc have read his own account of his pious chQdhood;
how liiH earlicHt thoughts were turned to things unseen and
eternal ; how he was reared in a household where fiadth in
(jud and Spirits ran out into ordinary talk and experience;
and where fatlier and mother regarded him as a wondrous
child, and vowed, that the very iVngels spoke through Ins
mouth. This state he describes as extending to his twelfth
year, but there he stops and leaves us to our own conjectures.
Whilst there is not an irreverent word in any of his books or
letters, yet from their general tone I conclude, that his college
EXTENT OF 8W£D£NfiOBU'b PIETY. 187
life dissipated the serious and heavenly spirit of his childhood,
and that on through his manhood he led an ordinary, but
not a religious life. On him however the malign breath of
scepticism seems never to have passed. His healthy mind
was as far from questioning the Divine Being and Govern-
ment as his lungs the air or his eyes the sunshine. In an age
when contempt, or at least indifference or doubt about religion,
was deemed a grace and mark of the Philosopher, Ids belief
m God and Bevelation was ever frankly and heartily confessed.
' Without the utmost devotion to the Supreme Being no one,'
he testified, ^ can become a complete and truly learned Phllo-
^sopher; for true Philosophy and contempt of the Deity
'are opposites.'* Indeed the passages in which he rises
mto any tender eloquence are those in which he utters his
flense of the entire dependence of Creation on the Divine
Life.
We have seen too, that he undertook his long and arduous
search for the Soul for the conversion of Unbelievers ; * for
^ those, who compare themselves to brutes, and think, that they
^ shall die as brutes, and thus rush fearlessly into wickedness.'
He advised those, who were gifled with Divine Faith to abstain
from his books, as for them useless, and admitted ' that who-
^ever believed Revelation implicitly, without consulting the
*' Intellect, was the happiest of mortals, and the nearest to
' Heaven. 't
An aim and expressions like these have been construed
mto proofs, that Swedenborg through his whole life was ' a
^religious man,' but with obvious inefficiency. There is no
Mgn, that in his manhood religion was anything deeper with
Um than an intellectual conviction. Lord Brougham has
written eloquently on Natural Theology, but we should smile
It any one, who should therefore attempt to register Brougham
among the Saints. So likewise, futile is the endeavour to
* ' Primdpidf* in 1784. f * Regnum Animale^^ in 1744.
188 THEOLOGY NOT CULTIVATED IN SWEDEN.
difiiise over Swedenborg an odour of sanctity, becanae in his
speculations he had the good sense to take the theistic side.
It is very clear, that he was not a technical theologian.
Nothing is more noticeable than the slight influence orthodox
divinity had on the operations of his mind. We have seen
how in ^ The Economy of the Anttnal Kingdom* he denied the
Resurrection of the Body, and how in * The IVincijnd* and
* The Worship and Love of Ood^ he wrote as if ignorant of
Moses and the common belief that Creation was a work begun
and ended in the space of rax days. It may appear incredible,
but I apprehend, that he pursued his speculations in complete
unconsciousness, that if he had been tried in any Catholic
or Protestant court he would have been adjudged a heretic.
Though a Bishop's son he had never been correctly grounded
in the Lutheran faith, and I am afraid, that if a committee of
sound divines had sat as inquisitors into his father's creed, they
would have been compelled to render a dismal report. Few
have any idea of the depth of stupor in which in those times
the Swedish Church lay sunk. Its priesthood had become a
mere corporation for reading so many prayers for so much
money, and they had all the horror of worldliness and sloth at
any pious activity. Hence their jealousy of Bishop Sved-
berg, who would keep stirring, and waking sleeping dogs with
the most irritating obstinacy. As a consequence, theology,
in any living sense, was uncultivated, and the laity were left
in as profound ignorance of their Bibles as if they had been
Papists. Gentlemen disdained the least taint of religion, and
except on formal occasions, would have been ashamed to
be caught church-going. Such being the state of things
in civilized Sweden* we need scarcely feel surprised, that
Swedenborg should speculate on Creation without any sense
* We may add, that matters at this day in Stockholm are very little
changed from what they were then. The Baptists are valiantly stmggliu^
through many difficulties and discouragements to reviye in their own way,
the frustnied work of the Hctists in Bishop Svcdberg's time.
SWEDENBORQ NO THEOLOGIAN. 189
of the danger, which a Philosopher in England would have
felt. Indeed, the goodwill he invariablj displays to Biblical
Bevelation leaves ns without doubt, that had he been aware
of his danger he would have taken pains to explain or defend
himself.
That Swedenborg, however, up to this period, was innocent
of any very heavy theological infliction he does not leave to
our sonnise. In 1767, Dr. Beyer wrote to him a letter asking
bis opinion concerning the writings of Jacob Behmen to which
he replied —
* I have never read them. I was prohibited* reading dog-
' matic and systematic Theology before Heaven was opened to
' me ; for, if I had, false doctrines and notions might easily
' have been sown in my mind, which, only with much difficulty,
* could afterwards have been rooted out.'
His reading on his chosen themes was profound, but for
desultory or miscellaneous reading he appears to have had no
taste, and as a consequence his range of allusion and illustra-
tion is very limited. I should suppose, that on many subjects.
History for instance, his learning was that of a school-boy.
Yet here his caution served him in good stead, and saved him
alike firom errors of arrogance and ignorance. We never find
him writing on any matter where his information was not on
a par with the best of his generation.
We have already observed, that in ' The Economy ' and
^ Tke Animal Kingdom ' there are many signs of the spi-
ritual life of his childhood bursting into Spring after the long
Winter of his manhood. We have heard him tell how his
boyish bead was filled with deep questions concerning the rela-
tions of Charity and Faith, and how he came to the conclusion,
tbat Charity must be the root of all true Faith. Curiously
eooagfa among his manuscripts is found the fragment of
* If auiing simply, I sappose, that he did not. In hiH neglect of Theology
be difcenied the Divine will and purpose concerning him ; as in like manner,
if ve eomider deeply, we may find in our own willing and unwilling omiMionie.
190 CHARITY AND FAITH.
a paper entitled ^ Faith and Good Works Philosopkically
considered '^'^ written Bomewhere about 1740 in which, as it
were, he takes np the thread of reasoning, he had dropped
when a youth of twelve. He begins —
^ There can be no doubt, that it is Faith, which saves, and
^not Works separate from Faith; but where there is a
* possibility of doing Grood Works, the question is, whether
^ Faith wiU save taithout them^ according to the dogma of the
^ Lutherans. We reply, that the affirmative seems compatible,
* neither with the Divine Word of Revelation, nor with human
^ Reason ; both of which lead rather to the conclusion, that
* Faith Without Works is a nullity ; and^ ioere it anything^
^ would condemn^ not save.^
First, ho quotes^ a number of well-known texts from
Scripture in support of his position remarking, that —
^ Paul, in his epistle to the Romans, says, that it is Faith
* which savesj but not Actions: meaning thereby, not Actions
* without Faith ; but Luther, in his translation of the Bible,
' has added to the words of the Apostle, " Faith without
^ " Works^^'* though the latter phrase is not to be found in
* the sacred text : and I believe, that Luther never committed
^ a greater sin, than when he made this interpolation : but
* God be the judge.'
He then dives into a metaphysical discussion, into which
we need not follow him, and emerges with the clenched
conclusion, ' that there is no love to God, if there be none
'to the Neighbour; or, that there is no Faith if there be
' no Works. Faith without Works is a phrase involving a
* contradiction, in which the predicate ignores the subject; it is
' a position of something from nothing and of the possible from
' the impossible ; it is a distinction inadmissible in this life.'
The last sentences of this paper are well worth noting for
* Printed by the Swcdenborg Association In 1845, in a yolamo of bit
* /WAwmoifir Tract* ' translated bv Dr. Wilkinwn.
SWSDBMBOBO'S EAKLT THEOLOGY. 191
their vivid contrast with his later experience and doctrine.
^e says —
^ In the Future Life, Love to God may be said to exist
^ wMout the performance of the duties of Love to the Neigh-
^boor. True; but in this case, Love and Faith are not
^ considered as saving, for the Soul is already either saved or
^ condemned ; and all the means, which consist in doing the
^ duties of Love to the Neighbour are taken away ; because
^ the Body, which is the subject of action, is extinct.' (Here
now comes a characteristic Swedenborgian inference.) ^ There-
^ fore, sumptuous Dives wished to return to Life, that he
^ might be able to minister to poor Lazarus.'
It is often asked how much of his Philosophy did Sweden-
borg carry over to his Theology, and it is a question difficult,
with precision, to answer. His Philosophy itself was in slow
but constant transition, and in 1744 many of his opinions of
1734 had been altered or repudiated. We shall find much in
his later writings, which will remind us of his earlier, but the
dureads are so intertwined and modified in the new texture,
that dissection usually ends in destruction, or mystification.
For example, of the grand revelation of his second life, the
Doctrine of Correspondences, we have hints in ' The Prin-
e^Ha ' and full expression of in ^ The Economy ' and ' The
Animal Kingdom /' but his first notion of Series and Degrees
b Creation, was that of rarity and density, of the Sun and the
Human Soul at the inside being only a finer form of the Earth
under foot. Gradually he introduces various discriminations
into hia first rude thought, until in his conception of the two
Sans, a Sun of Life or Spirit within the Suns of Nature he
Curly grasped the key to the mystery of the Order of the
Umverse. In a passage of promise in ^ The Animal Kingdom '
the great truth of the connection, as that of cause and effect,
existing between the Unseen and the Seen is discerned and
expressed in remarkable perfection. He writes —
192 THE DOCTRINE OF CORRESPONDENCE.
' In our Doctrine of Representations and Correspondences^
we shall treat of these STmbolical and Typical Kepresenta-
tions, and of the astonishing things, which occur, I will not
say in the living Body only, but throughout Nature, and
which correspond so entirely to Supreme and Spiritual Things,
that one would swear, that the Physical World was purely
Symbolical of the Spiritual World ; insomuch, that if we
choose to express any Natural Truth in Physical Terms, and
convert them into corresponding Spiritual Terms, we shall
by this means elicit a Spiritual Truth in place of the Physical
Truth ; although no mortal could have predicted, that any->
thing of the kind could possibly arise by bare literal
transposition ; inasmuch as the one precept, considered
separately from the other, appears to have absolutely no
relation to it. I intend hereafter to communicate a number
of examples of such Correspondences, together with a
Vocabulary containing the terms of Spiritual Things, as
well as of the Physical Things, for which they are to be
substituted.'*
The designed examples of Correspondences together with
the ^Vocabulary' he never published, but among his manuscripts
there is a draft of such a work, which after his death was
printed as ^A Hieroglyphic Key to Natural and Spiritual
Mysteries.^ It is worth very little and is not up to the light
of the paragraph just quoted ; and I should think was written
at an earlier date.
It would be easy to prolong tliis talk, but on the heights
at the end of our journey we shall view to better advantage
the lowlands on whose borders we tarry. Let us then arise
and move onwards. Swedenborg waits to take our hands and
lead us behind the curtain, which screens the Outer and Lower
from the Inner and Upper World.
♦ * The Ammal Kingdom,* Vol. I., p. 451.
1743 TO 1772.
EMAMEL SWEDENBOEG
FKOH HIS 6&IH TO HIS DEATH IN HIS SStb YEAB.
PART 11.
SPIBIT-SEEING AND THEOLOGY.
( 195 )
CHAPTER L
THE DAWN OF A NEW UFE.
Not without many signs and presages did the Spiritual World
open to Swedenborg. From his childhood, when on his
knees at prayer, his breath was curiously holden within him|
strange rays of light from the Sun of another country from
time to time had broken through his darkness.
' For many years before his mind was opened, and he was
enabled to speak mth Spirits, there were not only dreams
informing him of the matters, that were written, but also
changes of state when he was writing, and a peculiar extra-
ordinary light in the writings. Afterwards there were many
visions when his eyes were shut ; light miraculously given ;
Spirits influencing him as sensibly as if they touched his
bodily senses; temptations also from evil Spirits, almost
overwhelming him with horror ; fiery lights ; words spoken
in early morning; and many similar events.'*
^ Flames of various sizes and of different colour and
splendour were seen by him, and this so often, that for
several months when writing a certain work, scarcely a day
passed in which there did not appear before him flames as
vivid as those of a common fire, which were so many attesta-
tions of the truth of what he was writing : and this was
before the time ithm Spirits b^an to speak with him as
man with man.^
— ~ - - — — ^^^^~^~^~
•Pfom 8wedenborg»8 own * S^rUwd Diary,' No. «,96l, in which he
frequently writes thus impenonally.
t Fram his ' Advenaria^ on Genesin and Ezodaii. .
O 2
196 OPENING OF JNNEB EYES.
In the Fourth Part of his * Animal Kingdom^^ written in
1744, we find these words —
* According to admonition heard^ I must refer to my
* philosophical ^ Prindpia ' and it has been told me,
^ that by that means I shall be enabled to direct my flight
* whithersoever I will.'
Twice also in the same work he notifies, that he is com-
manded to write what he is penning.*
At p. 194 he mentions, that he saw a representation of a
certain Golden Key, that he was to carry to open the door to
spiritual things. At p. 202 ho remarks, at the end of a
paragraph, that ' on account of what is there written there
* happened to him wonderful things on the night between the
^ first and second of July ;' and ho adds in the margin, that
the matter set down was * foretold to him in a wonderful
* manner on that occasion.'f Still further on, at p. 215 ho
again refers to his extraordinary dream at the beginning of
July, 1744.
Until 1859 this was all the account there was to give
of the transition of Swedenborg's mind firom the study of
Anatomy to the year when he proclaimed himself in full com-
munion with Angels, Spirits and Devils. Except, that in 1744
he was in Holland printing the first and second parts of his
^ Animal Kingdom ' and in London in 1745 printing the third
part and * The Worship and Love of Ood^ nothing trust-
wortliy was known. On no part of Swedenborg's life was
knowledge more desirable, and on no part was our ignorance
more complete and tantalizing : but light was at hand.
In October, 1858, there was ofiered for sale to the Royal
Library at Stockholm a small octavo volume, such as was
* ' JusRuB Bum. Ita videar jusBUs.' M.S., pp. 202, 203.
t * H8DC qusB Bcripsi prscnuntiata mihi sant mirabiliter, vide finem Juli 1
* et 2. ScripBi .Jul. 2.* M.S., p. 174 in margin. * We g^ve these references
* to the M.S., t>ocAUBe hy Bome overaight the words appear to hare been
* omitted from Dr. Tafel's edition.* Dr. WilkinBon.
A PRECIOUS DISCOVERY. 197
commonly used for note-books last century, bound in parchment,
with a pocket on each side, and fastened at the middle with a
clasp. There were only sixty-nine leaves in it, as some,
probably blank, had been torn out. Only fifty-four leaves, or
to be exact one hundred and four pages were written upon.
On examination it proved to be a Diary kept by Swedenborg
between 1743 and 1744. Nothing, to those who had any
biographic interest in Swedenborg, could be more welcome.
The book had lain hidden in the library of Professor R.
Scheringsson, who died in 1849 aged ninety. With his heirs
it remained unnoticed, until turning it over, it was thought
that some money might be got for it at the Koyal Library.
Mr. Klemming, the Koyal Librarian quickly discerning the
value of the shabby old book bought it, and in 1859 he
printed an edition of ninety-nine copies,* edited mth a
punctilious care, which will for ever leave Swedenborgian
students his grateful debtors.
A manuscript so much desired, and produced with such
an indefinite history will at once, and naturally, excite in the
* * Svedenbarga Drihnmar 1744 jemte andra hana antechnngar. Efter
' Original'HandikrtfUr meddelade af O. E, Klemming: Stockholm, 1859.
Mr. Klomming places this motto on the title page from Swedenborg'a
later * Spiritual Diary .•* —
* Ita provisum est a Domino, ut phantasisB iis appareant prorsos siciit
'realiter forent. No. 4,360. (It is thus provided by the Lord, that their
' phantasies should appear to them altogether as realities.}' Swedenborg is
there writing of unhappy Spirits, but Mr. Klemming seems to think, that the
remark will apply to himself and his own Dreams. Only ninety-nine copies
were printed, on account of the obscene nature of some of the entries.
The Baron Constant Dirckinck Holmfeld of Copenhagen has very kindly
made for me a translation into English of the rough and difficult Swedish of
' The Drtam$: Tlys translation, with discreet omissions, has been printed
in the numbers of ' The Dawn ' for 1861-62, a monthly magazine published
by Mr. F. Pitman of 20, Paternoster-row, Ix>ndon. For the help of curious
American readers I may mention, that ' The Crisis,' a paper published at
La JbrUf Indiana, has reprinted in its columns ' The Dreams^ as they
appeared in * The Dawn:
198 A POCKBTN-BOOK OP VISIONS.
reader suspicions of forgery; but these suspicions he may
confidently lay aside. The Diary has been examined by the
best experts in Swedenborgian literature, and all confess that
its authorship is incontestible. The handwriting, the style of
thought and of diction are plainly and inimitably Swedenborg^s.
Many with every desire to discredit its genuineness are unable
to find ground for the least exception. Yet it is to be wished,
for perfect satisfaction, that the history of the manuscript may
some day be clearly made out.*
The Diary as printed by Mr. Klemming occupies sixty-
four pages, each comprising about as many words as one page
of the present book. There is much monotony in the entries,
and listenmg to Dreams is seldom a lively occupation ; yet
I hope nevertheless to hold my reader's attention whilst
we read together what is most characteristic in this curious
Diary : skipping whatever seema mere iteration, and omitting
some five or six passages, only fit for a medical journal, which
set forth at length would doom this volume, in all judicious
households, to existence under lock and key.
Let us premise, that Swedenborg had completed a large
part of his work on * The Animal Kingdom^^ and it was
necessary, that he should go to Holland to have it printed.
From Stockholm to the Hague.
*1743, the 2l8t of July,' the Diary opens, <I left
* Stockholm and arrived on the 27th at Ystad. The con-
* trary wind prevented us sailing until the 5th of August.
* On the 6th we reached Stralsund and early next day, we
* I observe that Dr. Wilkinson in his ^Swedenborg: a Biography f^ pub-
lished in 1849 states, that ' So observant was Swedenborg of what went on
' within himself, that he left a M.S. record of several of his Dreams from
' 1736 to 1740, which, however, unfortunately is not accessible, having been
' taken out of the M.S. volume which contained it, to be kept by the
* Swedenborg family.' — Pago 85.
STOCKHOLM TO THB HAGUE. 199
entered the town. I agun visited the fordfications, the
house where Charles XTT. had lodged, the Mejerfeldz
palace, and the churches. In St. Nicholas a clock is shewn,
which has been thrice struck by lightning, in 1670, 1683,
and 1688, just when the hand was at six oVlock. Visited
the new fortifications outside the Kniper-gate, and saw the
water-works, which supply the town : they consist of two
sets of pipes.
^ The 9th August I left Stralsund • • • , and on the 12th
arrived at Hamburg, and took up my quarters in the
Eeisershof, where also the Countess de la Gardie was
staying. I met Baron Hamilton, Beuterholm, Trivalt,
E5nig, Assessor Awerman, and I was presented to the
Prince Augustus, who conversed in Swedish. Afterwards I
was presented by the Grand Marshal Lesch to his Royal
Highness Adolph Friedrich and shewed him the manuscript
I had with me for printmg, and at the same time the
criticisms of my former works.
* On the 17th I went from Hamburg over the river to
Buxtahude, where I saw the prettiest country I ever beheld
in Germany. It was a continuous garden of apple-trees,
pear-trees, plum-trees, walnuts, chesnuts, limes and elms.
^On the 18th to Bremen with its fine ramparts and
suburbs. The best of these is Nystadt, on the bridge to
which there are no less than eleven water-mills, one by the
side of the other.
^ On the 20th from Bremen to Leer through Oldenburgh.
Thence to Groningen aad Harlingen, which last is a large
town '
Here the manuscript breaks off; and it is impossible to
say whether any continuation was written or not. The word
Stad (town) concludes the sixth page, followed by blank
leaves and the fragments of some three or four torn out.
Swedenborg we next find at the Hague, and his Diary
altogether changes its character. Thus the entries resume —
200 A LIST OF VI8I0NH.
The Beginning of Visions.
^ 1. Dreamed of my youth and the Ghistavlan family.
^ 2. In Venice, of the beautiful palace.
^ 3. In Sweden^ of the white cloud in heaven.
^ 4. In Leipsic, of one, that lay in boiling water.
* 6. Of one, that tumbled with a chain into the deep.
' 6. Of the King, who gave away so precious a thing in a
^ Peasant's hut.
^ 7. Of one, who wished me to travel.
' 8. Of my delights during the night.
' I wondered, that nothing more was left me to do for my
^ renown, so far as I could see. Also, that I had no desire for
* women, as I had had all through my life.
^ 9. How I was in waking extasies nearly all the time.
^ 10. How I withstood the Spirit*
* How I then favoured it
^11. How I found, that since I had come to the Hague,
^ my interest and self-love in my own work had subsided. I
^ myself wondered much at this.
' How my inclination for women, which had been my
^ strongest passion, so suddenly ceased.
^ How through all the time I had a sound sleep in the
^ nights, which was more than kind.
^ How my extasies were before and after sleep.
^ My clear thoughts about things.
* How I resisted the power of the Holy Spirit, and what
* then happened. How I saw Hideous Spectres without life,
^ fearfully shrouded, and moving in their shrouds ; also an
^ animal, which attacked me, but not the child
^ How a woman lay herself at my «ide as if I were awake.
^ I wished to know, who she was. She spoke softly. She
^ said she was pure, but she had a bad smell. I believe, she
^ was my Guardian Angel, because then the temptation began/
We now come to the first date, Mai\;h 24th, 1744, siuco
THJE KD&IXXUE^ OF TISIOKS. 201
kit de|iuiUTV fixxn Hjzfincai in AngiuL a tpmif cf
lawnhft Thk ik* v jtaie vlikb has ocxne orer S'weifBwbarg I
Aonld mppamt oomnKDccid nome vfaere in Mazdi. aad tint ke
had pg MigNJ kfifymg die Di»y, wlm fae mcbei tlie Hag«e
iboot the beeTnnmg of Se^Monber. aod grew hasy orer the
pnw6 q{ " Tke Amimtal Kit^dcmS The dasei aqaialgJ bj
the et&m Bgxiifr the night betveen the ereoiiig ind the
motiBng o[ each daj.
M744. Maith 24X25.
* I somL beade a marhine mored bj a vheeL the fpohes
<^ vinch eotazkgkid me more and more* and foreed me
upward, ao ihaz thei« vasno escape
* I va» in a gardcsu laid out in manj beamifiil firuiaoi,
osie of vioch I vidieti t^ pc»99ea&. I kx4£>d roond to see if
there vae anj war b j vbich I oonld get cvt : I thoc^:fat I
aav oike. Inzt then thoncibt of another. Some one was bmy
picking off inriable creeping things, and killing them. He
flajd thej vere bags, vliich some one had broogfax and thrcnrn
into the garden to infest th<isie there* I £d not aee them,
but I faimd anc^her little inxcU wfaidi I let &I1 co a piece of
winte EzKn beside a vccnan. It ^agnififid the impmitT widm
me. vhoch Las t!> be e]
* I aeeoked to take a ker : went in : waf examined br the
d'xc-kicieper a§ to what ke j$ I had ; I shewed them all to see
whether I might hare two. but Hessefiii>* seemed to hare
anther. I was arrefietd and watchexL and manx came to me
in carnage&. I thc*nght I had n<>t done anj wrDDg; jet I
remanbered. that it might look 9ii5pici<>os if it waa adLed,
bow it happi^3>eKL that I had taken that key. I awoke. Tlus
ha* manj <agxiificaxi'>n« : a&. that I had taken the kcj to
* l>r i'*i^\. }i«M«.i k fm^ua vni vh-.^ he timrtuled in 1721
202 8TRANQB DBBAMS.
^ Anatomy ; the other in the possession of Hesselius was the
^kej to Medicine. Or, that the key tq the Lungs is the
< ptdmonary artery, which is thus the key to all the motions
^ of the Body. Or, it may be interpreted spiritually.
^ I wanted medicine for my disease. I got a number of pence
^ to buy it with. I took half of them, and selected some from
< the other half; but gave all back again. The man said, that
' he would buy me something for my cure. This signifies my
^ corporeal thoughts as being coins with which I tried to cure
^ myself, but it was of no use.
^ Afterwards I came out and saw many black beetles ; one
^ was thrown at me. I saw, that it could not use its feet. I
^ believe, that this means, that Natural reason cannot har-
^ monize with Spiritual
* N.B.— 3 X 4 April. The day before Easter.
^ Experienced nothing during the whole night, though I
^ often awoke. I thought all was away and settled, and that
' I was left, or had driven away in a carriage. In the morning
^ I appeared to ride off on horseback, and it was shewn me
^ whither I should go ; but wherever I looked it was dark, and
' I found myself lost in the darkness ; then it became light and
^ I saw, that I had gone astray. Saw the way and the forests
^ and groves whither I ought to go, and behind them the sky.
^ I awoke. Then came the thought about this Life, and eternal
* Life, and aU seemed to me fuU of grace. I burst into tears
' because I had loved Him so little, but rather continually had
* angered Him, Who had led me, and finally had shewn me
' the way, that leads to the Kingdom of grace, and because I
* had become unworthy to receive mercy.
'4X5. Went to the Lord^s Supper.
^ There was sung a melody, and a line I remember from
' the hymn —
* ' Jesus is my best of friends.'
' The buds have come out quite green.
MISERY AND JOY. 203
*5 X 6. April.
Desolation and Extatte Bliss.
' Easter was the 5th of April, when I went to the Lord's
Supper. Temptation still continued, chiefly after dinner till
6 o'clock, but not in a definite form. It was an anxiety as
if I were condemned and in Hell Prayer and the
Word of God soothed down these fears ; Faith was present
in fullness, but Confidence and Love seemed to be gone. I
went to bed at 9 o'clock, but the temptation, accompanied
with trembling, continued until half-past 10. I then fell into
a sleep in which the whole of my temptation was represented
to me
* Afterwards I wakened and fell asleep again many
times. I had visions the whole night. My thoughts were
pressed fiill with a life and magnificence, I cannot describe.
All was heavenly, clear at the time, but inexplicable now.
In one word, I was in Heaven, and heard speech, that no
tongue can utter ; nor the glory and the innermost delight,
which followed the speech.
^ Besides, I was also awake and in a heavenly extasy,
which also cannot be described. At 9 o'clock I went to bed,
and got up between 9 and 10 next morning: having been 12
or 13 hours in bed. Praise, honour and glory be to the
Highest I Hallowed be His Name ! Holy, holy. Lord God
of Sabaoth !
* I found in myself like rays of light, and felt it the
greatest happiness to become a Martyr. When I consider
tlie indescribable mercy connected with the love of God,
the wish arises to go through those torments, which are
nothing in comparison to what is eternal. It is the least of
tilings to offer up one's life.
^ I also felt in my Mind and Body a sensation of inex-
pressible delight, so that had it been intensified I should
have been dissolved in mere bliss.
204 A DITINE APPEARANCE.
^ This was the night between Easter Sunday and Monday ;
^ also the whole of Easter Monday.
* 6 X 7 April, 1744. N.B. N.B. N.B.
^ I went to Delft, and the whole day had the
^ grace to continue in deep spiritual thought, deeper and
* lovelier than I had ever been in before. It was the work
* of the Spirit, Who was with me.
' I went to bed Half an hour after I heard a tuni-
* bling noise under my head. I thought it was the Tempter
^ going away. Immediately a violent trembling came over
^ me from head to foot with a great noise. This happened
* several times. I felt as if something holy were over me.
' I then fell asleep, and about 12, 1, or 2 the tremblings and
^ the noise were repeated indescribably. I was prostrated on
'my face, and at that moment I became wide awake and
' perceived, that I was thrown down, and wondered what was
' the meaning.'
In what follows we shall understand the meaning of tlie
thrice Nota Bene set over this entry. It is the account of
The First Divine Appearance to Stvedenborg.
' I spoke as if awake, but felt, that these words were put
* into my mouth —
* * Thou Almighty Jesus Christ, Who by Thy great
' ' mercy deigns to come to so great a sinner, make me
* * worthy of Thy grace.' '
' I kept my hands together in prayer, and then a hand
* came forward and firmly pressed mine. I continued my
* prayers, saying —
^ ^ Thou hast promised to have mercy upon all sinners,
* * Thou canst not but keep Thy word.' '
't moment I sat in His bosom and saw Him face to
ras a £aoe of holy mien and altogether inde-
ed He smiled so, that I believe, His face had
ia when He lived on earth.
« •,
A DIVINE APPEARANCE. 205
' He spoke to me, and asked, whether I had a certificate of
health. I answered, ^' Lord, Thou knowest that better than
'I." "Do then," He said, which signified, as far as I
perceived in my mind, to love Him in reality, or, that I
should do what I had vowed. God give me His grace to do
so I I saw it was beyond my own power, and I awoke with
trembling.
' Again I came into a state of thought, neither sleeping
nor waking. I thought. What can this be ? Is it Christ,
God's Son, I have seen ? It would be sinful to be in doubt
about it, but as it is commanded we should try the Spirits, I
considered all over, what had happened last night.
' I found that I had been purified, soothed and protected
the whole night by the Holy Spirit, and thus prepared so far;
also, that I had fallen on my face and prayed, not from my-
self, for the words were put into my mouth, and all was holy.
* So I concluded, that it was the Son of God Himself, Who
came down with the noise like thunder. Who prostrated me
on the ground, and Who called forth the prayer. So, said I,
it was Jesus Himself from Whom I asked mercy for having
so long remained in doubt, and for having thought of asking
for a miracle.
' Then I fell to prayer and sought only for mercy. More
I could not utter; yet afterwards I prayed to have love,
which is the work of Jesus Christ and not my own.
' All the while tremblings came over me.
' Afterwards, at daybreak, I again fell asleep, and it came
into my thoughts, how Christ imites Himself to mankind.
My thoughts were holy, but they were such as are quite
unsearchable. I am not in the least able to write down what
then happened. I only generally know that I was in such
thoughts.'
A Vision of the Bishop.
' Then I saw my father in a dress of a nearly red colour.
206 BISHOP BVBDBERa APPEARS.
* He called me and took me by the arms, where I had half Bleeves
* with cufib or raffles in front. He. pulled both ruffles, and tied
^ them with my own strings. These ruffles signify, that I am
* not among the Clergy, but am in a civil office, and must
^ remain so It is curious to observe, that I did not call
' him my fitther, but my brother. I reflected on the reason of
* this, and it seemed to be, that as my father was dead, this
^ fitther must be 9iy brother.
* Not to forget, that it came into my mind, the Holy Spirit
' would show me to Jesus and present me to Him as a work,
^ He had thus far prepared ; also, that I ought not to attribute
^ anything to myself, but that all is His, though of grace. He
^ impute it to us.
' Then I sang the 245th Hymn I had selected —
^ ^ Jesus is my best of friends.'
' I have now learned in spiritual things, that the sum of
^ all is, to humble oneself, and to desire nothing else, save the
* mercy of Christ. ....
* 7 X 8 April.
* Throughout the whole night I was going down deep,
^ stairs after stairs, but quite securely, so that the depth was
* without any danger for me. There occurred to me in the
* dream, this verse — ^ * Neither depth, nor anything else,
' whether future or ' (Romans viii., 38, 39)
^ Christ in Whom all the Godhead is perfect, ought alone
* to be prayed to ; for He takes the greatest sinners to grace,
^ and regards as nothing our unworthiness. How can wo
^therefore, address ourselves to other than Christ? He is
^ Almighty and the only Mediator/ ....
The Greatest of Sinners.
* I found myself to be more unworthy than others, yea the
* greatest sinner, because the Lord had given me power to
* penetrate with my thoughts more deeply into certain matters
MONEY AND MELANCHOLY. 207
' than others ; and the very fountain of sin lies there, in tlie
* thoughts brought into action. Hence my sins spring finom
' a deeper ground than those of many others ; and in this I
' found my unworthiness and my sins greater than those of
* other men
* Whilst I was in the Spirit I strove to know how I might
^ avoid all, that was impure ; yet I marked, that the impure
' on all occasions thrust itself forward For instance
' if any person did not regard me according to my own
^ estimate, I discovered, that I always thought in myself,
* * Ah ! if you only knew what grace I have, you would act
^ ^ otherwise.' This was at once impure, and had self-love
* for its root. When I found this out, I prayed to God for
* forgiveness.'
Can a Man be Rich and Meh/iieholy f
^ I heard somebody at the table ask, if any one could be
^ melancholy who had plenty of money ? I laughed in my
^ mind at the question, and had it been addressed to me, or
^ had it been fit that I should have spoken, I should have
^ answered, that one, who has abundance, may not only be
^ melancholy, but suffer melancholy in a higher degree — ^in the
^ Mind and Soul, or the Spirit, which operates therein. I
^ wondered, that any one could put such a question.
^ I can the better testify to this ; for by the grace of God
^ abundance of all I require in worldly things has been allotted
' to me. I can live in plenty on my annual income, can
^ accomplish whatever I intend, and have a surplus remaining;
' and thus I can bear witness, that the corporeal sufferings
' which result from scarcity of food and clothing are by no
^ means so bad as the spiritual.'
Whether the pains arising from lack of food, clothing and
shelter are worse than those of spiritual misery, is one of those
insoluble problems in which debaters luxuriate. Swedenborg
thinks he settles it by his own experience, but plainly in-
208 NO TALKING ABOUT THE VISIONS.
eflfectuaUy, for by his own admiBrion his experience was
wholly one-sided.
A BookaeUer^s Shop,
^ Saw a bookseller^s shop. Thought immediately that my
books would do more than other people's. But then it struck
me at once, that one is servant to another, and the Lord has
amongst His means a thousand ways of preparing one man.
Thus every book ought to be left to its own value, as a
means of action, near or remote, upon the state of each man's
reason. Still pride and arrogance will push forth. May
God control them, who has the power in His hands
How he held his tongue about these Visions.
^ All the while I was in society as before, and nobody could
^ see in me the least change, which was of God's mercy. I
^ was not allowed to speak of the high grace which had fallen
^ to my lot, because I perceived that it could not serve any
^ other purpose than setting people thinking and talking
^for and against me, and, at the same time, nurture my
* self-love
'8X9 April.
^ There appeared to be a dog on my knee. I wondered at
^ it speaking and asking about its former master Swabe. It
^ was black, and kissed mc. I awoke, and called on Christ
* for mercy, because of the gre^it pride I cherish, and the self-
* flattery it induces
'9 X 10.
A Night of Bliss.
* The whole day of the 9th I was in prayer, in songs of
* praise, in reading God's Word, and fasting
^ In the night I slept tranquilly, but between three and
^ four in the morning, I awoke, and remained waking, but
JOY, ABSTEACTIOX, SUFFERING. 209
as in a vision. I could look up and be awake whenever I
liked, 60 that I was not otherwise than waking, but as in a
vision. From the Spirit there was an inward and sensible
gladness shed over my whole body It was Love
itself. This Love, in a mortal body, of which I was
then full, is to be compared to the joy, which a chaste man
feels when he is with his beloved one. Such was the extreme
pleasantness suffiised over me for a long time There
came a little chill over me, and a sort of slight shiver, as if it
tortured me '
HU Abstraction in the Streets.
^ Afterwards I fell asleep, and saw one of my acquaintances
at a table. He saluted me, but I did not observe him at
once, or return his salutation. He was angry, and gave me
some hard words. I tried to excuse myself, and at last I
said I was wont to be absent, and not to observe when any
one saluted me, so as sometimes to pass my friends in the
street without seeing them. I appealed to another acquaint*-
ance, who was present in confirmation of this, and he said it
was the case. I further said, that no one could (and GUkI
grant it may be so !) be more polite and humble than I • • •
' 10 X 11 April.
^ .... I slept this night upwards of eleven hours, and all
^ the morning was in my usual Qtate of inward delight, but
^ combined with a pain, which I thought might arise from the
' power of the Spirit and my own unworthiness. At last, by
^ God^s assistance, the thought prevailed, that one must be
^ satisfied with what the Lord pleases, because it is His
^ business
^ I am still weak in my body and mind, for I know nothing,
^ but my own un worthiness, and that I am a wretched creature,
* which torments me. I thus perceive how unworthy I am of
* the mercy I have received.
p
JIO PERPLEXITY FROM DOUBLE THOUGHTS.
*' I learned, that a man can sufier spiritual anguish
^ altliongh he is assured by the Spirit of having obtained
^ forgiveness of sins, and has the hope and assurance of God^s
* grace.
* 12 X 13 April.
^ When I had risen, I was in great fear before the
^ Lord, as in a chill ; this was God^s grace, shewing
^ me, that with fear and trembling I had to seek salvation.
* As my motto is, " Thy will be done, I am Thine and not
' ' mine," so I have given myself to our Lord, that He may
^ deal with me according to His good pleasure. In the body
* there was something of discontent, but in the spirit I was
* glad
^ I was continually in a combat with double thoughts. I
* pray Thee, O Almighty God, that I may obtain the grace to
^ be Thine and not mine. Forgive me for saying, that I am
^ Thine and not mine ; even this does not belong to mc, but
* to God. I pray only for the grace, that I may be able to be
^ Thine and not to be left to myself.
* 13 X 14.
* Thought how the grace of the Spirit the whole night
wrought with me. I saw Hedvig, my sister, with whom I
would have nothing to do, which signifies, that I ought not to
busy myself with the AmQial Economy, but to leave it
* The whole day I was in double thoughts, which tried to
destroy the spiritual life, as it were with scoffing, so that tlie
temptation was very strong. By the grace of the Spirit, I
succeeded in fixing my thoughts on a tree, then on the Cross
of Christ and on Christ crucified. As often as I did so, the
thoughts fell down flat of themselves God be praised.
Who gave me such a weapon. May God of His grace
grant, that I may always have my crucified Saviour before
my eyes. I dare not look upon my Jesus, Him I had st^cn,'
DREAMS OP WOMEN. 211
(as in Vision of 6 X 7 April) ^ for I am an unworthy sinner.
* I rather ought to fall on toy face^ and it is Jesus, who then
' lifts me to look upon Christ crucified.
' 14 X 15 April.
' I seemed to move quickly down a stair-case. I only
slightly touched the steps, but I got down safely. There
came a voice from my dear father, " You are creating alarm,
^ Emanuel." He said it was wrong, but would let it pass.
This denotes, that yesterday I had made too free use of the
Cross of Christ, yet it was of God's grace, that I escaped
the danger
* Dr. Morsus appeared to be courting a handsome girl, and
she allowed him to do with her what he liked. I joked with
her because of her easy consent. She was a handsome girl,
and grew taller and prettier. This means, that I should
obtain information and meditate about the muscles.
* I had an extraordinary deep and long sleep for twelve
hours. When I awoke I had the crucified Jesus and His
Cross before my eyes. The Spirit came with high, holy and
extatic life, and raised me higher and higher, so that if I
had ascended further I shoidd have dissolved away in mere
.i^^y
* 15 X 16.
^I appeared to dimb up a ladder from a great depth.
* After me followed women, whom I knew. I kept quiet and
* frightened them on purpose. Then went up and reached a
* green wall, where I lay down. They followed me, and I
* saluted them. One was yoimg, the other a little older, who
^ lay down at my side. I kissed the hands of both, being at a
^ loss to know which I should love. It signifies my thoughts,
^ and the works of my mind in a double aspect
' I went to the Ambassador Preis, and he went
p2
212 FEARFUL DSBAM8 AND ANXIOUS THOUGHTS.
^ to Pastor Pombo, to ask him if I might again receive the
^ Lord's Supper, which was granted I dined the
* same day with Preis, but had no appetite.
' The 17th was at the Lord's Supper with Pastor Pombo,
* 17 X 18 April.
^ I had horrible dreams : how an executioner roasted the
^ heads, which he had struck off, and hid them one after
^ another in an oven, which was never filled. It was said to
^ be his food. He was a big woman, who laughed, and had a
^ little girl with her.
^ Afterwards, how the Evil One brought me to several deep
^ places, and bound me. I do not remember it all. Was cast
^ bound into HelL
* How a great procession was drawn up, from which I was
^excluded. How I strove to get into it, but was drawn
^back.
'As I am confident, that God bestows His grace and
' mercy on all poor sinners, who desire to be converted, and
' with stedfiast fidth take refuge in His inconceivable merci-
* fulness and the merits of Jesus Christ, the Saviour, I also
' feel assured of His grace, and leave myself to His protection,
' believing with assurance, that I have God's forgiveness for
' my sins, which is my consolation ; which may Gx>d, for Jesus
' Christ's sake, strengthen*
' I was this day now and then in interior anxieties, and
' sometimes in despair, though assured of the forgiveness of
'my sins Jn the night I slept beyond ten hours.
' By God's grace I have had a preternatural sleep ; as abo
' during the whole half year.
' 18 X 19.
' It appeared, that we worked a long while to take a chest,
' in which there were precious things. We were a long while
' as if it had been the siege of Troy. At last, one went under-
A HAPPY ASSURANCE. 213
ncath and raised It, and it was then borne in as conquered,
and we sawed and sawed. It signifies how one has to work
to conquer Heaven.
^ I seemed to have a plain watch with me, but at home,
valuable watches, which I would not exchange for gold ones.
It shows, that I am likely to acquire knowledge of a nobler
kind, on which to employ my time
^ I was at Divine service, and in thoughts about Christ,
His merits, and the like Faith appeared to be far
above the thoughts of my understanding. Then only I got
peace I do not know if it be not the highest gift to
have one's understanding kept from meddling with Faith.
However the Lord permits it in some, that assurances of the
understanding should precede Faith. Happy are they, who
believe and do not see ! This I have clearly written in the
Prologue to The Animal Kingdom I see how difficult
it is for the Learned, far more than the Unlearned, to come
to this Faith, and become elevated above themselves, and
laugh at their own littleness ; for adoration of their own in-
telligence must In the first place be taken away and destroyed,
which is the work of God and not of man
* That Faith only Is God's gift, which man receives when
he lives according to God's -commandments, and thus per-
severlngly prays to Him for it
M9 X 20 April.
' I kept my hands together ; on awakening
^ they seemed to me to be pressed together by a hand or a
* finger, which signifies, God grant it, that He has heard my
Sprayers
' I rose up now wholly God's ; God be thanked and praised.
* I will not be my own. I am certain and confident, that Thou,
* O God, lettest me be Thine in all the days of my life, and
^ that Thou dost not take Thy Holy Spirit from me, Which
^ strengthens and upholds me.
214 RENEWED TEMPTATIONS.
^ This day I was in a very strong temptation, so that when-
' ever I thought about Jesus Christ impious thoughts thrust
^ themselves in, and I was unable to control them as I wished.
* I conquered myself, but I can affirm I never was in better
' spirits than to-day, and not in the least cast down, or trembling
* as on other days, though the temptation was most strong.
^ The Lord gave me powerful confidence, that He will help me
' for the sake of Jesus Christ and His promise, so that I then
* experienced, what is the effect of such Faith. I was also so
^ intensely angry with Satan, that I wished to fight him with
^ the weapons of this Faith
« 21 X 22 April.
^ Afterwards I came into doubt, feeling myself so
^ widely separated firom Him, that I thought whether I should
^ not return home But I took coiurage, and found, that
^ I had come here to do my best and further Grod^s honour ;
^ that I had got talents, and that everything aided me, Grod's
* Spirit having been with me fi:x)m my youth up. I should
* consider myself unworthy of existence, if I should venture to
' walk in any but the right way ; and so I laughed at these
^ seducing thoughts.
' As to the luxury, riches and honours, at which I had
^ aimed, I now think them empty vanities, and that the man is
^ happier, who has none of them, and lives contented
*22 X 23.
^ I had troublesome dreams about dogs, that were said to
*be my countrymen, and which sucked my neck without
^ biting In the morning I had horrid thoughts, that
* the Evil One had got hold of me, yet with the confidence,
^ that he was outside of me and would let me go. Then I fell
' into the most damnable thoughts, the worst that could be.
* Tlien Jesus Christ was presented vividly to my interior sight,
^ and the influence of the Holy Spirit came over me, and 1
^ knew from this that the Devil had gone away.
STRANGE DIUSAHS. 215
^ The day after this I was now and then in combat, and in
^ double thoughts and strife. In the afternoon, I was mostly
^ in pleasant spirits and thought of God, though I was in
^ worldly business. I was then travelling to Leyden.
^ 23 X 24 April, at Leyden.
^ I seemed to be fighting with a woman in flight, who
^ drove me into the sea and out again ; at last I struck her
' with a plate on the forehead as hard as I could, and bore
^ upon her face, until she seemed to be overcome. It signifies
^ my struggles and my combat with my thoughts, which I
^ had vanquished
^ Afterwards I fell asleep awhile, and it seemed to me
^ that a quantity of oil mixed with some mustard was floating
* about. This may denote my ftiture way of life, or it may
*be pleasure mixed with adversity, or it may signify some
^ medicine intended for me
^ 24 X 25, in Amsterdam,
^ I was the whole night, nearly 11 hours, neither asleep
^ nor awake, in a curious trance. I knew all the while, that I
* dreamed, but my thoughts were kept bound, which made i&e
' sweat
' 25 X 26.
^ A woman and a man appeared sitting in a boat ready
* for sailing. One had my cap, which I took from him. He
* shewed me the way to a beautiful room where there was
* some wine. It signifies perhaps that I shall take my work
* to England
^ 26 X 27 a< <A6 Hague.
* I had a pleasant sleep for 11 hours with various repre-
sentations. A married woman persecuted me, but I escaped.
^ It signifies, that the Lord saves mo from persecution and
* temptation.
216 NATURAL SCIENCE TO BE LEFT FOR SPIRITUAL.
^ A married wcmian desired to possess me, but I preferred
^ an unmarried. She was angry and chased me, bnt I got
^ hold of the one I liked. I was with her, and loved her :
* perhaps it signifies my thoughts.
* There was a woman with much and beautiful property,
^ in which we walked, and she wished to marry me. It is
^ Kety, and I think also Wisdom, who owned the estate. I
' was with her, and shewed her my love in my usual way: it
^ appeared to be before marriage.'
He is not to read Theology^
^ It was also shewn me, that I ought not to pollute myself
^ with the books of others concerning Theology and kindred
^ matters ; because all this I have in God's Word and from
« the Holy Spirit.
« 28 X 29 April.
^ All this I think appears to mean, that I ought
* to apply tlio time left me to higher purposes, and not to
* write on worldly matters, but rather on those, which belong
* to the very centre of all and have reference to Christ. May
^ God enlighten me more about my duties, for I am as yet
^ somewhat in the dark as to what direction I ought to
^tako
' 30 April, 1 May.
' My deceased brother Eliezer appeared to be
^ with mc. IIo was attacked by a boar, which laid hold of
^ him aud bit him. I tried to drag the boar down with a
' liook, but was not able. After this I went up and saw him
* lying between two boars, which were eating his head, and he
* got nobody to help him. I ran past. I believe it signifies,
* that tho day l>efore I had indulged too much in eating and
^ conHinned abundantly, which is a work of the flesh and not
' of the Spirit ; it is living like swine, which Paul forbids.
LEAVES HOLLAND FOR ENGLAND. 217
' The day after I took care, but I fell into a somewhat
strong temptation. I was in a strange temper, and as it
were anxiety, about the iuture restraint of my appetite. I
was however soon delivered after praying and singing a
psalm : the more so as I intend to be no longer mine own,
but to live as a new man in Christ.
^ For several days I was in spiritual anxiety without being-
able to tell the cause, though I seemed to be assured of God's
mercy ; but in the afternoon I was in a very pleasing mood
and in spiritual peace.'
Here ends the Diary in Holland. The next entry records
his departure from the Hague on the 13th of May for England^
but without assigning any reason for his change of abode.
^ At Harwich, on my arrival in England, I slept only a
^ few hours, and there appeared then much, which may have
* reference to my work here. It was the 4x5 May according
^ to the English Kalendar.'
The entries made in England are much more mysterious,
than those made in Holland, and the difficulty is frequently
great to disentangle dream and vision from reality: for in-
stances, take these passages with which the English portion
opens —
^ 1. I lost a bank note, and the finder got only 9d. for it.
^ Another found a similar note, and sold it for 9d. only. I
* joked about it, saying it was only mock piety: probably it
^ shows of what quality people are in England, part of them
^ honest, part dishonest.
^ 2. There were some who admired my engravings, as
^ being beautifully executed, and wished to see my sketches^
^ as if I were able to sketch as well. It may mean that my
' works are approved of, and they think me not their author.
^ 3. A little letter came into my hands, for which I paid
^ 9d. When I opened it, I found a large book with dean
' paper, and in the midst of it beautiful drawings .On
^ the left side a woman was sitting, and moved to the right
218 THOUGHTS AND VISIONS IN LONDON.
^ side and tamed the leaves, when the drawings came forth.
^ The woman had a very large neck, quite bare, her skin was
* bright as if it had been polished, and on her thumb she had
^ a miniature painting. This perhaps signifies that, with Grod^s
^ help, I shall have a number of beautiful drawings executed
^ for my work, and that henceforth my speculations will be
^ turned hjniari^ instead of hpoateriori as heretofore
* 5 X 6 May, in Ixmdon.
^ I got blows firom a big man, which I took to account.
^ Then I was told to sit on a horse and ride at the side of the
* carriage, but the horse turned his head, took hold of my head
^ and held it. I do not know what it means. I suppose, I
^ have done some vn'ong to a devout Shoemaker, who had been
* with me on my journey, and at whose house I then had
* lod^gs, or that I have neglected my work.
* Sum of Sums. — 1. We only attain salvation by mercy.
* 2. The mercy is in Jesus Christ, Who is the mercy-seat.
*3. Salvation is promoted through love to God in Christ.
* 4. Then a man allows himself to be led by the Spirit of
^ Christ. 5. All that comes of ourselves is dead and nothing
^ but sin, and worthy of condemnation. 6. No good can be
^ derived anywhere else than from the Lord.
* 19 X 20.'
Comfort followed hy Distreaa.
^ On the 20th I intended going to the Lord's Supper in
* the Swedish Church,' (Princes Square, east of the Tower)
' but, just before, I had fallen into many corrupt thoughts, and
' my body is in continuous rebellion, which was also repre-
^ sented to me by froth, which had to be wiped away
* The day before I enjoyed internal quiet and content in my
' lot as appointed by the Lord. I felt the strong work of the
^ Holy Spirit and a pleasure as of Paradise in my whole body.'
WOMEN AND M0KAVIAN8. 219
Danger among Women.
^ I nevertheless could not refrain from going after women,
^ though not with the intention of committing acts, especially
^ as in my dreams I saw it was so much against the law of God.
^ I went to certain places with Professor Ohlreck In
^ one day I was twice in danger of my life, so that if Gt>d had
^not been my protector I should have lost my life* The
^ particulars I refrain from describing.'
The Intense Inward Joy (same date).
* However the inward joy continued so strongly, especially
' when I was alone in the morning, noon, and evening, that
* it may be likened to heavenly joy brought to earth. This
^ joy I hope to keep as long as through the Lord's grace I
* walk in pure ways and keep the right path in view ; for if I
^ turn aside and seek delight in worldly things, the joy dis-
* appears '
The Alioravian Brethren in Fetter Lane.
'By several providential leadings I was brought to the
' Church of the Moravian Brethren, who regard themselves as
' the true Lutherans. They tell each other, that they feel^the
* operation of the Holy Spirit, and trust only in the grace of
' God, and the blood and merits of Christ. They are simple-
^ minded in their doings. I shall say more about them another
' time, for as yet I am not permitted to enter into brotherhood
' with them. Their church was represented to me three months
' before, just as I have seen it since, and all the Brethren were
* dressed as clergymen.'
Here the Diary breaks off from the 20th of May until the
11th of June, that is, for three weeks ; and in this interval we
may take occasion to set fortha curious narrative rekting to
Swidenborg's conduct and state of mind and com^ectioTtith
the Moravian Brethren. Let it be noted, that at this time,
1744, he was lodging at the house of one Brockmer in Fetter
220 MATHESIU8, BROCKMER, AND SWEDENBORO.
Lane, which lane connects Holbom with Fleet Street, and in
which the Moravian meeting-house Was and remains situated.
Our story is derived from the Rev. Aron Mathesius,* who
in 1766, four-and-twenty years after our present date, came
from Sweden to London to officiate in the Swedish Chapel.
Hearing much of Swedenborg's Spiritualism, which he is said
to have held in high contempt, through accident or search he
came acro88 Brockmer, who was rtUl Uving in Fetter Lane,
and led him off to the house of Mr. Burgman, the Minister of
the German Church in the Savoy, and in Burgman's presence
drew from Brockmer's lips the statement we subjoin.
Mathesius some years afterwards gave the Rev. John
Wesley a copy of Brockmer's narration, which Wesley printed
in his Armiman Magazine for January, 1781. We have also
in manuscript, in Swedish, the story directly from Mathesius's
own hand. This I have had translated, and from it print.
With the exception of two or three extra details it is precisely
the same as that given in the Arminian Magazine. Wesley
introduces it to his readers with this preface —
* Arminian Magazine^^
^ January^ 1781.
^ An Account of Baron Stcedenborg.
' The following account of a very great man, was given
* * Rev. Aron Mathesius, bom at Pyhajocke, in Finland, 25th November,
' 1736. ' His father was the Rev. Nils Mathesius, who had 25 children, of
' whom Aron was the youngest. His father died 1740. After attending
' school at Ulleaborg, he became student at Upsala, 1754 ; PhiL Dr. there,
' 1764. During three years tutor to a son of the Rev. Dr. Noring. Ordained
* at Abo, 1767. Camo to London, 1768, and assisted Pastor Ferelios, and
* officiated also some time at the Danish Church. Was appointed Minister of
'the Swedish Church, and Chaplain to the Embassy, Ist November, 1773.
' Resigned this place and returned to Sweden, 1784, where he lived on a
* private estate till 1805, when he was appointed to the Rectory of Foglas,
* in the diocese of Skara. Died 29th November, 1809. Married, 1789, and
* had two children, one son and one daughter, who are both living.' —
Anteckningar r'dramle Svenaka Kyrkan t London^ of O, W. CarUon, Stockholm,
1852. p. 153.
hrockmer's story, 221
^ me by one of his own countrymen. He is now in London,
* as is ilr. Brockmer also, and ready to attest every part of it,
^ In the Barents writings there are many«excellent things : but
^ there are many likewise which are whimsical to the last degree.
^And some of these may do hurt even to serious persons,
* whose imaginations are stronger than their judgements.'
Brockmer^a Narrative.
* In the year 1743,* one of the Moravian Brethren, named
Seniff, made acquaintance with Mr. Emanuel Swedenborg
while they were passengers in a post-yacht from Holland to
England. Mr. Swedenborg, who was a God-fearing man,
wished to be directed to some house in London, where he
might live quietly and economically. Mr. Seniff brought
him to me, and I cheerfully took him in.
* Mr. Swedenborg behaved very properly in my house.
Every Sunday he went to the church of the Moravian
Brothers in Fetter Lane. He kept solitary, yet came often
to me, and in talking expressed much pleasure in hearing the
Gospel in London. So he continued for several months
approving of what he heard at the chapel.
^ One day he said to me, he was glad, the Gospel was
preached to the poor, but complained of the learned and rich
who, he thought, must go to. Hell. Under this idea he
continued several months. He told me he was writing a
small Latin book, which would be gratuitously distributed
among the learned men in the Universities of England*
^ After this he did not open the door of his chamber for
two days, nor allow the maid-servant to make the bed and
dust as usual.
' One evening when I was in a coffee-house, the maid ran
^ in to call me home, saying, that something strange must have
» Should be 1744.
222 bbookheb'8 stort.
happened to Mr. Swedenborg. She had several times knocked
at his door without his answering, or opening it.
^ Upon this I went home, and knocked at his door, and
called him bj name. He then jumped out of bed, and I asked
him if he would not allow the servant to enter and make his
bed? He answered, ^^ No," and desired to be left alone, for
he had a great work on hand.
' This was about nine in the evening. Leaving his door
and going up stairs, he rushed up after me, making a fearful
appearance. His hair stood upright, and he foamed round
the mouth. He tried to speak, but could not utter his
thoughts, stammering long before he could get out a word.
^ At last he said, that he had something to confide to me
privately, namely, That he was Messiah, that he was come
to be crucified for the Jews, and that I (since he spoke with
difficulty) should be his spokesman, and go with him to-
morrow to the Synagogue, there to preach his words.
* He continued, " I know you are an honest man, for I am
* sure you love the Lord, but I fear you believe me not."
^ I now began to be afraid, and considered a long time ere
I replied. At last, I said,
* * You are Mr. Swedenborg, a somewhat aged man, and
* as you tell me, have never taken medicine ; wherefore I
* think some of a right sort would do you good. Dr. Smith
^ is near, he is your fnend and mine, let us go to him, and he
* will give you something fitted for your state. Yet I shall
' make this bargain with you, if the Angel appears to me and
' delivers the message you mention, I shall obey the same.
' If not, you shall go with me to Dr. Smith in the morning."
' He told me several times the Angel would appear to me,*
' whereupon we took leave of each other and went to bed.
* *' I know you are a good man, but I suspect yon will not believe me.
" Therefore the Angel wiU appear at your bedside early in the morning,
** then yoa will believe me." — Version in the Armnian Magazine,
BROCKMER'8 8T0RT. 223
^ In expectation of the Angel I could not sleep, but lay
awake the whole night. My wife and children were at the
same time very ill, which increased my anxiety. I rose about
5 o'clock in the morning.
^ As soon as Mr. Swedenborg heard me move over-head
he jumped out of bed, throw on a gown, and ran in the
greatest haste up to me, with his night-cap half on his head,
to receive the news about my call.
' I tried by several remarks to prepare his excited mind
for my answer. He foamed and cried again and again,
'But how — how — ^how?" Then I reminded him of our
agreement to go to Dr. Smith. At this he asked me straight
down, " Came not the vision ?" I answered, " No ; and now
' I suppose you will go with me to Dr. Smith." He replied,
' I will not go to any Doctor."
' He then spoke a long while to himself. At last he said, —
' I am now associating with two Spirits, one on the right
' hand and the other on the left. One asks me to follow you,
' for you are a good fellow ; the other says I ought to have
' nothing to do with you because you are good for nothing."
' I answered, '^ Believe neither of them, but let us thank
' God, Who has given us power to believe in His Word."
' He then went down stairs to his room, but returned
immediately, and spoke, but so confusedly that he could not
be understood. I began to be frightened, suspecting that he
might have a penknife oi* other instrument to hurt me. In
my fear I addressed him seriously, requesting him to walk
down stairs, as he had no business in my room.
* Then Mr. Swedenborg sat down in a chair and wept like
a child, and said, '^ Do you believe, that I will do you any
'harm?" I also began to weep. It commenced to rain
very hard.
* After this I dressed. When I came down I found Mr.
Swedenborg also dressed, sitting in an arm-chair with a
great stick in his hand and the door open. He called,
324 BROGKMER^S 8T0RT.
^ Come in| come in," and waved the stick. I wanted to
* get a coach, but Kr. Swedenborg would not accompany me.
'I then went to Dr. Smith, Mr. Swedenborg^s intimate
fiiend, and told him what had happened ; and aaked also that
he would receiTO Mr. Swedenborg into his house. He had
however no room for him, bat engaged apartments for him
with Mr. IGchad Caer, wig«*maker, in Warner Street, Cold
Bath Fields, three or four houses from his own.
^ Whilst I was with Dr. Smith, Mr. Swedenborg went to
the SwecUsh Envoj, but was not admitted, it being post-day.
Departing thence he pulled off his clothes and rolled lumself
in very deep mud in a gutter. Then he distributed money
from his pockets among the crowd which bad gathered.*
^ In this state some of the foot-men of the Swedish Envoy
chanced to see him and brought him to me very foul wiih
dirt I told him that a good quarter had been taken for him
near Dr. Smith, and asked him if he was willing to live there.
He answered, " Yes."
' I sent for a coach, but Mr. Swedenborg would walk, and
with the help of two men he reached Ins new lodging.
'Arrived there, he asked for a tub of water and ux
towels, and entering one of the inner rooms, locked the door,
and spite of all entreaties would not open it. In fear lest
ho should hurt himself the door was forced, when he was
dtsoovored washing his feet, and the towels all wet. He
asked for six more.
' I then went home, and left six men as guards over him.
Dr. Smith visited him, and administered some medicine,
which did him much good.
^ I went to the Swedish Envoy, told him what had hap-
' pened, and required that Mr. Swedenborg's rooms, in my
• ' Ho then went to a pUoe called GnUy Hole, nndresaed himself, rolled
* in a Tory deep mud, and threw the money out of hia pockets among the
' crowd.' — Armiiiian Magmtine,
brockmer's story. 225
house, might be sealed. The Envoy was infinitely pleased
with my kindness to Mr. Swedenborg, thanked me very
much for all my trouble; and assured me that the sealing
of Mr. Swedenborg's chambers was unnecessary as he had
heard well of me, and had in me perfect confidence.
' After this I continued to visit Mr. Swedenborg, who at
last had only one keeper. He many times avowed his
gratitude for the trouble I had with him. He would never
leave the tenet, however, that he was Messiah.
* One day when Dr. Smith had given him a laxative, he
went out into the fields and ran about so fast that his keeper
could not follow him. Mr. Swedenborg sat down on a stile
and laughed. When his man came near him, he rose and
ran to another stile, and so on.
* When the dog-days began, he became worse and worse.
Afterwards I associated verj' little with him. Now and
tlien we met in the streets, and I always found he retained
his former opinion.'
Mathesius adjoins to his copy this testimony —
' The above account was word bv word delivered to mv
* by Mr. Brockmer, an honest and trustworthy man, in the
' house and presence of Mr. Burgman, Minister of the German
* Church, the Savoy, London, while Swedenborg lived.
^ Aron Mathesiu9.
* Stora Hallfara, 27th August, 1796.'
Plainly a straightforward and well authenticated story,
possibly somewhat coloured by the influence of Mathesius, and
by the inevitable treachery of a twenty-four years' memory ;
but fitting into the incoherences of the Diary with singular
credibility, and full of touches characteristic of a timid, prudent
and credulous London lodging-house keeper. Thanks are
due to Mathesius for his careful preservation of a testimony,
which else had died with Brockmer.
Ilobert Hindmarsh, a zealous Swedenborgian, some time
Q
226 COMMENTS ON BROCKMER^S STORY.
in, or after 1783, accompanied by throe friends, called on
Brockmer, and questioned him very closely about the tale he
had told Mathesius, reading it over to him from ' The Arminian
* Magazine^'* along with another tale, (which will be presently
cited) to the great alarm and confrision, we apprehend, of poor
Brockmer's mind.* Hindmarsh professes, that Brockmer
told him —
" To the best of my knowledge and recollection some
^^ things in that account are true, others are absolutely false,
^' and the whole is exaggerated and unfairly stated. It is
" true, that Swedenborg once caUed himself the Messiah, but
" not true, that he always persisted in it whenever I met him
" afterwards. It was true, that his hair stood upright, for as
" he wore a wig, it was necessary to keep his hair cut short, in
" which case any person's hair will stand upright ; but it is
" not true, that he looked frightftil or wild, for he was of a
^' most placid and serene disposition. It is true, that he had
'^ an impediment In his speech, and spoke with earnestness ;
" but not true, that he foamed at the mouth."
IlindiuarAh fooling how little he was taking by his motion
then addroHHcul thiM wide question to Brockmer —
** Hupponing it to Imi truo, that Swedenborg did actually
" SCO aiul converHi^ witli Augt^ln aiul Spirits, — Did you ever
" observe anytliing in bin behaviour, that might not naturally
" be expected on suoh an extruonliimry occasion?"
To which ho n»prtmont« Brockmor returning this accommo-
dating answer —
"If I belie vod that to be true, I should not wonder at
" anything he wild or did; but would rather wonder, that the
**Hurprim5 he must have felt on such an occasion, did not
♦ Tlio vUlt ho doHorilHMi in a periodical of which he was publisher
entitled, ' The New Magatine of Knowledge coneemfng Heaven and BeU, ani
* the Univenal U'orUI of Nature, <*c.» By a Society of Gentlemen. Vol. II,
p. 92. March, 1791, London. The interview with Brockmer is repeated
by llindniarsh in several works, and is a stock quotation of Swedonborgian
apologists.
COMMENTS ON BROCKMER'S STORY. 227
^^ betray him into more unguarded expressions than were ever
^' known to escape him ; for he did and said nothing, but what
" I could easily account for in my own mind, if I really
" believed what he declares in his writings to be true."
Whether or not Hindmarsh and his three friends had
muddled Brockmer's memory with readings from * The Ar^
' minian Magazine'* and cross-questioning, it is plain, on his own
evidence, that he did nothing substantially to upset Brockmer's
testimony as delivered to Mathesius. * Some things in it were
* true, some false, and the whole exaggerated,' is evidently a
rhetorical flourish of Hindmarsh's ; for when he condescends
to particulars he is only able to make a few trifling emenda-
tions as to manner, and to adduce not anything which can be
designated ' absolutely false.' Moreover Hindmarsh failed to
extract from Brockmer under what circumstances he confided
to Mathesius the story about his lodger. His examination of
Brockmer is very unsatisfactoiy. In the end, even in the
details where they slightly difier, we can but come to these
questions. Did Brockmer speak the truth to Mathesius, or to
Hindmarsh? and. Which are we to believe, Mathesius or
Hindmarsh ? For us, Hindmarsh does little more than provide
reasons for Mathesius's substantial credibility.
Mathesius is reputed to have disliked Swedenborg, and
Swedenborg Mathesius.* Hindmarsh on the other hand was
an out-and-out Swedenborgian devotee. There was preiudioe
apparently on the side of both ; but another and a more
impartial witness we are able to produce in the person of the
Rev. Francis Okely, a Moravian preacher, who shortly before
Swedenborg 's death made his acquaintance, and read his books
with mingled approval and dissent. Writing of Mathesius's
story as published by Wesley he remarks : —
* There is no denying, that in the year 1743' (1744)
* When Swedenborg was dying, it wm proposed to send for MutheRins to
administer the Sacrament, but Swedenborg refused to see him, preferring
Pcrelius, another Swedish clergyman.
q2
'.'3 B8I CKXER ^ «TOKT.
* wlieiL >w^ije!nh4>r; wnft tint as he suf introdaeed into tbe
* Spirinial W iriL ae wru ihr a widLe mzaiie. He dioi Ercd
* widi ILr. Bci^'imfr. Jt» Mr. J. Wesley ba^ pobSdied in Ins
* ' JLrminHai Mjoptztn^^ abr Jinnsaaj'. 17^1 As I imtber
* »5pet.t J. W."* aarrany?** they faein^ abrajs wsipeJ to his
" own iai:tinit£tjiu I EnqoERii i}t' Mr. BroK^mer contoning it,
"^ a£ui hiiTt; :t>fz]iii ttH me ziukii Gne§ ■}€ it tredi.'*
TIiCK. I rhmfc. znaj bt> omsbieRd ci'^Klnare in fiiT<Nn* of
tht* rrrdiriia*?'* c M idiH«ni*w
We !!• •»- wm** t<. ;ft psvinftil p*$»e^ connected with this
a&ir, in wfeich W^jfej ninat be severeh" censored for scHue
cmz>ek» tattle, hj which he brxi^r d<rwn odinm alike on
Swedenb.'r? and MarQi?su5w an-i threw the dear and honest
story or Bnximer into ct:!ifu-£oG and discredit.
We have seen, that he printed Brockmer's stoiy commu-
nicated to him bj Mathe:sii5 in Lis * Armitiam Magazine * for
Januarv. 17S1 : and so t^. <rr-vL Sondrv Methodists abont
that time had begnn to lt:«ok into Swedenborg's books, and
ask questions concerning his doctrines ; and Wesley for their
guidance, at Wakefield, in May. 17S2« drew up a paper, en-
titled * Thoughts af'Out SwedenhorgS in which he ridicolcd and
contraTerted Swedenborgian opinions in a very flippant and
silly manner. From press of matter, or some other cause,
tlie article did not make its appearance in *• The Armmian
* Magazine ' imtil the following year, when, in the number for
August, 17S3, he entertained his readers wnth his ' Thoughts^
and tlie following astounding version of the Brockmer story —
' Many years ago the Baron came over to England, and
* lodginl at one Mr. Brockmer's ; who informed me, (and the
* Kinno information was given me by Mr. Mathesius, a very
* Horions Swodiali clergj^man, Iwth of whom were alive when I
• Kn>in the Rev. Fnuicis Okely*» ' BejUrtioHs on Baron Swcd^nhorg'M
' Unrki,' priiitiHl in the New York 'AVie Jemmtiem MtMenger* of 28th
Wesley's scandal. 229
^ left London, and, I suppose, are so still,) that while he was
' in his house he had a violent fever ; in the height of which|
* being totally delirous, he broke from Mr. Brockmer, ran into
' the street stark naked, proclaimed himself the Messiah, and
' rolled himself in the mire. I suppose he dates from this
^ time his admission into the society of Angels. From this
* time we are undoubtedly to date that peculiar species of
^ insanity, which attended him, ¥rith scarce any intermission,
' to the day of his death.'*
With the true story of Brockmer before us, communicated
to Wesley by Mathesius, and printed by Wesley yrithin three
years in the same ^Arminian Magazine^^ we ask. Can anytliing
be more discreditable to Wesley's veracity than this second
story? It is superfluous at this day to pay compliments to
Wesley for his zeal, ability, and blessed labours; these are
universally confessed; but we cannot forget, that he was a
sad gossip, and that truth was nearly certain to suffer when it
encountered his dislike or self-will. The instance before us is
no more than characteristic of his loose and unscrupulous
habit of writing and speaking.
Hindmarsh says Brockmer told him, '^ that he had never
" opened his mouth on the subject of Swedenborg to Mr.
" Wesley ;" adding, " Swedenborg was never afflicted with
" any illness, much less a violent fever, while at my house :
^' nor did he ever break from me in a delirious state, and run
'^ into the street stark naked, and proclaim himself the Messiah.
" Perhaps Mr. Wesley may have heard the report from some
" other person ; and it is well known, that Mr. Wesley is a
'^ very credulous man, and easily imposed upon by any idle
" tale, from whatever quarter it may come."
The narrative of Brockmer preserved by Mathesius ought
to be kept entirely apart from Wesley's, which is to be con-
signed, without hesitation to the refuge of lies. Although
^' ' Artninlan Magaune^'^ 1783, pngo 438.
230 weslby's scandal.
the attentive reader will at once have discerned that the two
accounts have little in common, yet thej are continually
blended together, and Mathesius is even charged yrith having
led Wesley astray ! The late Rev. Samuel Noble, a leading
Swedenborgian preacher and writer, declares* with a bold
ignorance, which were it less bitter might be amusing —
^ It has given much pain to the receivers of the doctrines,
^communicated in the writings of Swedenborg, that the
^ circulation of the report of his insanity should have been
^ materially promoted by a man so much entitled to respect
* as the late Rev. Mr. Wesley. It is however, certain, that
' in the part, which that respectable person took in the affair,
^he was completely imposed upon by the minister of the
^ Swedish Chapel in London, Mr. Mathesius, who was
* Swedenborg's personal and violent enemy .f .... The
* origin of the story was evidently no more than this ; Sweden-
^ borg mentioned freely to Brockmer the commencement of
^ his spiritual intercourse : Brockmer talked of it : and from
^ the idle reports which thus got abroad, Mathesius, nearly
^ forty years afterwards, fabricated the tale with which he
^ imposed on Mr. Wesley. This fact is alone sufficient to fix
* the brand of imposture on the whole story.'
Not content with bringing such a gratuitous charge of
^fiftbrication' and imposture ^ against Mathesius, Mr. Noble
next proceeds to assert, that Mathesius himself went mad.
* In * An Appeal in behalf of the Views of the Eternal World and State,
' and the Doctrinee of Faith and Life, held by the Body of Chrietiane, who
* believe, that a New Church is signified {in the Bet>elation, Chap, xxi.) by the
* New Jerusalem : embracing Answers to aU prine^Ml Objections.* Third
edition. London, 1855, page 241. Noble's ' Appeal' among the Sweden -
borgians is a book which holds the same place that Barclay's ' Apology '
does among the Quakers.
t That Mathesius was ' Swedenborg's personal and violent enemy' is
merely an inference or colouring of Noble's, and one quite unwarranted.
There is no evidence, that the two men ever came in contact. Mathesius
apparently had no belief in Swedenborg's claims and doctrines, and this
iiicrodulitv wan in all likcliln><Hl the extent of his aversion.
COMMENTS ON BROCKMER'S 8TORT. 231
With that malice, affecting reluctance, in which the pious are
such adepts, he observes —
^ We are by no means prone to assume the distribution of
^ Divine judgements ; but it really is difficult to avoid thinking,
^ that we behold one here* All must allow it to be a remark-
^ able coincidence, that the man, who first imputed insanity to
^ Swedenborg, and was the chief cause of its being believed
^ by others, should himself have experienced the deplorable
' visitation, and continued insane through the remainder of
^ his life All the accounts agree : and thus evident it
'is, that into the pit, which this unhappy man digged for
' another, did he fall himself.'
The ' accounts which agree ' are of next to no authority
whatever ; they are three. The first is the anonymous preface
to an ' Ahrege dea Ouvrctgea dTEm, Bvoedenhorg^ published at
Stockholm in 1788, in which it is stated, that Mathesius had
become insane, and was then living as a madman in Stockholm;
the second, is the assertion of Mr. C. B. Wadstrom, a Swede,
resident in London, and one of the editors of an early Swe-
denborgian publication, ' The New Jerusalem Magazine;^ and
the third, and very likely the origin of the other two, is the
testimony of Bergstrom, the keeper of a Swedish inn, the
King's Arms, in Wellclose Square, London, where Swedenborg
once lodged for ten weeks, and was as Bergstrom said, * very
* generous to him.' Mr. Provo* visited Bergstrom on the
2nd of May, 1787, when he says he told him, that —
' Mr. Mathesius was an opponent of Swedenborg, and
^ said that he was a lunatic ; but it is remarkable, that he
^ went lunatic himself; which happened one day when he
' was in the Swedish church, and about to preach : / was
^ there and saw it: he has been so ever since, and was sent
* Mr. Peter Ptoto, a surgeon in London, author of a book entitled
' WUdom*» Dietntes,* He ooUected from Bergstrom and others rarions
particuUrs reUting to Swedenborg, which wore first published in ' The
' JrUeUedual BeposUory^^ a Swedenborgian magazine, in lS3d.
.232 COMMENTS ON BROCKMER'S STORY.
* back to Sweden, where he now is : this was about four
* years ago.'
It is certainly of little consequence to us at this day whether
Mathesius went mad or not; and the fact of his sanity or
insanity in 1784 in no wise aflfects the truth of the narrative
ho drew out of Brockmer about 1770 ; yet one cannot see the
* Divine judgements' thus foolishly and vindictively distributed
on the trumpery evidence of an anonymous preface, the asser-
tion of a Swedenborgian editor, and the gossip of a publican
to whom Swedenborg had been handsome, without at least
permitting the facts of Mathesius's life to speak for themselves.
Mathesius, neitlier by the records of the Swedish Church, nor
to the knowledge of his relatives was ever insane. After
working and preachiipig for sixteen years in the smoke of the
east of London his health failed, and possibly Bergstrom may
have seen him faint or fall into a fit in his chapel, and mistake
some incoherent words for madness. In consequence of his
fiuling health, he resigned his charge in 1784, and returned
to country life, in his native air, in Sweden. Five years sub-
sequently he married ; in 1805 he was appointed Hector of
Foglas, a living in Bishop Svedberg's diocese of Skara ; and
died in 1809 at the ripe age of three score and thirteen,
leaving behind him a son and daughter, who yet survive.
These facts nullify utterly the statement, that ' Mathesius
'went lunatic and continued insane to the end of his life.'
Sweeping aside, then, the scandal of Wesley against Sweden-
borg on the one hand, and the scandal of the Swedenborgians
against Mathesius on the other, let us relate one otlier story con-
nected with this period, and then return to Swedenborg himself.
It is derived from the preface of a book* published 1786,
« * TabUau Analytique et RaUonni d€ la Doctrine CiUsU de VEgU»e de
*ia NouveUe Jerusalem, ou Precit des (Euvre$ ThSologiquei d* Emanuel
* Swedenborg, fiddle Serviieur du Seigneur Jesua ChrisL A Ixmdres, ae trouve
' ches VAuteur, So. 62. Tottcnliain Court Road, 1786.'
chastanier's story. 283
by Benedict Chastanier, a French surgeon resident in London.
Alluding to Brockmer's and to Wesley's stories, which, after
the manner of the Swedenborgians, he mixes together, he
writes —
^ This fable had its origin in the following circumstance :
One day Swedenborg, while in his own house, fell into a
swoon, or a kind of extasy, or rapture of soul in the presence
of two Jews. They, profiting by his absence of mind, stole
his gold watch. Awakening, Swedenborg quickly discovered,
that his watch had been taken from under the bolster of his
bed, and at once asked the Jews to give it up. " Do you
" not know," said they, " that in your trance you took your
'^ watch, went out into the street, and threw it into the
"gutter?" Swedenborg contented himself in answering,
"My friends, you know what you say is false." Being
afterwards advised to give the thieves up to justice, he
answered, "It is not worth the trouble. By this action
" these good Israelites have wronged themselves more than
" me. The Lord have mercy on them I" An answer right
worthy of Swedenborg.'
Chastanier adduces the name Mr. C. Springer, Swedish
Consul in London, and a friend of Swedenborg's, in con*
firmation of the truth of this odd anecdote. It is too French
to be quite credible ; and it certidnly does not explain away
Brockmer any more than does Mr. Noble's more unscrupulous
vituperation.
We now resume the Diary.
* June 11 X 12, 1744. London.
* I was in thoughts about those, who resist the Holy Spirit,
^ and those who give themselves up to the Spirit's guidance. . . •
' 15 X 16.
* A representation of my past life was brought before me,
' and also of how I have been walking among deep abysses on
284 THB BOOR OP DREAMS.
^ every mde, and how I tomed back. Then I came into a very
^ magnificent grove planted yrlth most beantifid fig trees in
^ perfect growth and order. On one there appeared withered
*figs.
* 20 X 21 Jnne.
' It seemed to be under consideration whether I should be
^ admitted to the Society, or to any of its coundls. My father
^ came out and told me, that what I had written about Provi-
^dence was most beautiful. I remembered it was only a
' little treatise. After this, one night I found myself in a
^ church but naked, yrith nothing on but my shirt, so that I
^ did not venture forth. This may signify, that I am not as
' yet dad and prepared as I ought to be. ... •
* 1 X 2 July.
^ There happened to me something very curious. I came
into violent shudderings, as when Christ showed me His
IKvine mercy. The one fit followed the other ten or fifteen
times. I expected to be thrown on my face as before, but
this did not occur. At last, trembling, I was lifted up, and
with my hands I felt a (human) back. I felt with my hands
all along the back, and then the breast. Immediately it lay
down, and I saw in front the countenance also, but very
obscurely. I was then kneeling, and I thought to myself
whether or not I should lay myself down beside it, but this
I did not, for it seemed as if not permitted.
^ The shudderings came all from the lower parts of my
body up to my head. This was in a vision, when I was
ncitlier waking nor sleeping, for I had all my thoughts about
me. It was the inward man separated from the outward,
that was made aware of this.
^ When I was quite awake similar shudderings came
several times over me. It could not but be a holy Angel,
because 1 was not thrown on my face' (As he was at the
THE BOOK OF DREAMS. 235
Divine appearance) ' What it means our Lord knows best. . . .
^ God^s mercy is shewn both to my inward and outward man.
' God alone be praised I
' From these and other indications I perceive, that it may
' signify, that I shall discover truths concerning the internal
^ sensations, feeling then along the back but only touching
* them in front obscurely
'3x4 July,
^ I seemed to take leave of her with particular tenderness,
^ kissing her, when another woman a short way off appeared.
' The result was, that when awake I was in continual amorous
' desire This signifies, that I have now finished what
' I have written on the Senses in general, and the operation
*' of the Interior Faculties I now come to the second
' part or the Cerebrum. . . .
' * 21 X 22.
* I saw a congregation in which every one had a little
' crown on his head, and two that stood in front had large and
*• magnificent crowns It signifies those who had got
* martyr crowns, of whom I had been thinking the day before.
* Who the two in front were I do not know ; whether one of
^ them was Huss, I am not aware
^ When I awoke, I came into a vision wherein I saw much
' gold before me ; the air was full of it. It means that the
^ Lord, Who disposes all, affords me all I want in spiritual and
* worldly things, whenever I cast my cares on Him.
' 22 X 23.
' I appeared to take a very hi^ flight, but in such a circle,
* that I came down just when I grew tired. I saw a beautiful
* drawing-room with a very fme tapestry on the walls, all of
^ one piece. It signifies what I had in my mind and heart the
' day befoix) ; that if we leave Christ to care for us in spiritual
286 THE BOOK OF DREAMS.
^ and worldly things, all is done. I saw a boy running away
^ with one of my shirts. It may mean, that I had neglected
* to wash my feet.
* 30 July X 1 August.
* I was a long time in holy shudderings, but at the same
^ time in a deep sleep. I thought whether I might not see
^ something holy. I appeared to be thrown on my face, but I
^ am unable to say yrith certainty
' After this I waited in expectation of a procession of
* horses. They came of a light yellow colour, beautiful large
^horses. Afterwards more came to me; coach-horses, fat,
^ large and handsome, decorated witli lovely harness. This
* signifies the book I have now begun on the Cerebrum. Thus
^ I learn, that I have God's assistance in it, which greatly aids
^me
* 26 X 27. •
^ The day before I was much troubled and weighed down
^ with my sins, which it seemed to me had not been forgiven,
^ and which hindered me the last time from partaking of the
* Lord's Supper. Then I seemed to be relieved. In the
^ night the soles of my feet appeared to be quite white, wliicli
^ signifies, that my sins are forgiven, and still more, that I aiu
^ again once more welcome
*1 X 2 September.
* I meditated going to the Lord's Supper on the 2nd
^ because I was assured, so far as I know, that I am delivered
*from my sins. But then I saw a large dog, which ran
' towards me, but he did me no harm
' iVfterwards I seemed to hear, that Dideron had left his
^ King and gone over to the Danes and there was slain
' I waited for his corpse. I heard Immediately, as if he had
* inspired mc, that I ought not to leave the congrcp:ation of
THE BOOR OF DREAMS. 237
* Christ, nor go to that place to receive the Lord^s Supper,
^ and that if I did so, I should become again spirituallj dead.
^ I could not understand anything more, so that there is a
* mystery in it. I did not go, and was kindled by the Holy
^ Spirit, as is generally the case when I follow its dictates. • . .
'17 X 18 September.
' I saw the King of Prussia, and one said, that he was
' going to bring on a quarrel between the Kings of Prussia
' and France
«21.
* This was Sunday. Before I slept I had much thought
about the subject on which I am writing. Then it was said
to me, " Hold your tongue, or I will strike you." Then I
saw a man sitting upon some ice, and I was afraid. I was
as in a vision. I restrained my thoughts, and experienced
the usual shudderings. All this implied, that I should not
work so long, particularly on Sunday, or perhaps in the
evenings.
' 29 X 30.
* I saw the front of the most beautiful palace that ever
' was seen. There was a glory like the sim upon it. I was
' told, that it was resolved, that I should be a Member of the
' Society, which is innnortal, which no one before had been,
*" except one, who had been dead, and had lived again. Some
' said, that there were more, who were thus. It came into
' my mind, whether it was not more important to be with
' God, and live from Him. This had reference to what I
' have finished writing on Organic Forms in general, and
' chiefly at the end.
' After this some one said he would call on me at ten o'clock.
' He did not know where I lived. I told him I lived in the
^ front part of the palace, as I then thought. This signifies,
288 THE BOOK OF DREAMS.
Vthat what, with God's asaistanoe, I had then written about
^ Forms, was such, that it would cany me still further to see
^ what is yet more glorious.
^ Afterwards I was with women, but would not touch them
^ as I had previously had to do with that, which is holier. On
^ this occasion much occurred to me, whicl^ I left to Grod's will,
^ because I am as an instrument, with which He does according
^ to His pleasure. Yet I would wish to be with the foremost.
* Not my will, however, but God's (be done). God grant, that
^ I do not mistake in this. I believe I do not.
* The 3rd to the 6th October.
^ Several times I have experienced, that Spirits are of
various kinds. The one Spirit, which is Christ's, is the only
one, that has all blessedness with it. By the others, man is
enticed a thousand ways, but woe to those who follow them.
• • • • It is necessary, therefore, to discern the Spirits, which
is a thing that cannot be done except through Christ and
His Spirit. It was represented to me in sleep in what awftd
danger I had been in on the night between the 29th and
30th, when I was on a piece of ice, which could scarcely bear
me, and I came near to an awfiil abyss. A person on the
other side could not come to my assistance, so I went back.
GU)d, through Christ, is the only one Who helped me. He
is my Lord and Master, and I am His slave. Honour and
thanks to Him, without Whom none can come to G^d.
*6X 7.
^ Something was told me about my book. One said ^ The
* * Worship and Love of God ' was a Divine book I
* seemed also to see the Czar Peter and other great Emperors,
* who despised me because I had half sleeves
* Very easily is man deceived by Spirits, who draw near
*and flatter and coincide with his desires. Afiections arc
* represented by Spirits ; yea indeed, by Women.
THE BOOK OF DREAMS. 239
* 7 X 8 October.
^ I saw In a vision a Heart filled with blood. It
* is Love.
' 12 X 13.
* I seemed to say to myself, The Lord will instruct
me I know nothing else than that Christ ought to
be all in all, or God through Christ. We are unable of
ourselves to do anything, still less to strive. Hence it is
best to surrender at discretion; and if one could be altogether
passive before Him, it would be the same as being perfect.
'I saw also in a vision fine bread presented to me. It is a
sign, that the Lord Himself will instruct me, since I have
now for the first time come into the condition, that I know
nothing, and all preconceived judgements are taken away
from me. This is the beginning of instruction, namely, first
to be a child, and so to be nursed up in knowledge. Such is
now my case.
* 13 X 14.
^ Among other things it was told me, that for the last
^ fortnight, I have been growing much handsomer, and have
* become like an Angel. God grant that it may be so I
' 18 X 19.
' A. big dog, which I thought was chained, flew at me and
* bit my leg. One came, and closed his terrible jaws, and
*kept him from ftirther mischief. It meant that the day
^ before I had heard an oration in the College of Surgeons,
^ and I desired in thought, that they would name me as the
^ one, who best understood Anatomy. Yet I was glad it did
^ not happen
* 20 X 21.
*' In the evening I found myself in a strange mood.
240 THE BOOK OF DREAMS.
such as I never had been in before. I thought that I
despaired of the mercy of God, though I knew, that Grod is
very merciful, and to me especially has sheum greater grace
than to others. This anxiety had place in my Soul, and not
in my Mind. The anxiety was perceived by the Mind in
the Soul, but without any pain in the Body. I then fell
asleep
^ Afterwards I saw a great King, who was King of France.
He went about witliout any attendants or courtly state. One
who was with me seemed not to know, that he was a King.
I told him that he was one of those who did not care for
grandeur. He was courteous to all alike, and spoke to me.
When he went out he was also without attendants, but took
upon himself the burdens of others and bore them as garments.
Thence I came into a large company where there was great
magnificence. I saw the Queen. The Chamberlain came
and bowed to her, and she likewise made a deep reverence.
There was no pride in her.
^ This signifies, that in Christ there is not the least of pride,
and that He makes Himself equal with others, although He
is the greatest King ; and that Ho does not trouble Himself
about that whicli is great ; and, that He takes the burdens of
otheili upon Him. The Queen, who is Wisdom, is also like
Him, and has no solf-love, and does not consider herself of
any account because she is a Queen.
* 26 X 27 October.
Another Vision of Christ.
* I MiMMned to be with Christ, with Whom I conversed
* witliotit cen^mony. He borrowed a little money from
^ anothcT, abotit five pounds. I was sorry, that He did not
* borrow of me. 1 took two pounds, of which methought I
^ Ic^t one drop, and then tlie other. He asked, what it was.
* I Naidi *^ I have found two," one being probably dropped by
END OF THE BOOK OF DREAMS. 241
^ Him. I offered, and He took them. In such an easy
^ manner did we seem to live together. It was a state of
^ innocence.
^ Christ said, that I ought not to undertake
* anything without Him
* In the morning when I wakened, there came upon me the
' same kind of giddiness or swoon, which I had six or seven
* years ago at Amsterdam when I began * The Economy of the
* ^Animal Kingdom^^ but much more subtle, so that I appeared
^ to be near deatli. It came on as soon as I saw daylight, and
* threw me upon my face, but passed off by degrees, while
* short doses of sleep overcame me. This swoon was more
* inward and deep, but soon passed away.
^ It signifies, that my head is actually cleared and purified
^ from things which hinder thought. The same happened in
^ the former case, whence I obtained greater penetration,
* especially when writing.
^ This was also now represented to me in that I appeared
* to write in a delicate hand.'
On page 99 of the manuscript Diary there are only the
last four words. Several blank pages then Intervene, and the
mysterious record closes with this entry —
Ml X 12 (Month not given).
* I left Ohlrcick, and on the way there was deep water.
* On its margin there was a very narrow path along which
^ I walked. It seemed to me, that I ought not to go into
' the deep water. It seemed, that a rocket burst over me,
* showering out beautifxil sparks. Perhaps it means love for
* what is high.'
It is disappointing, that Swedenborg says not one word
further concerning his visits to the Moravian Chapel. Possibly
they were discontmued after hia removal from Brockmer's to
Dr. Smith's in Cold Bath Fields. ITie Chapel in Fetter Lane
242 THE MOEATIAHB Ol mTER LAVE.
b an old baOding. It cflcaped die Grait Fire of 1666, and
appears to have undergone no diange beyond paint and
wliitewa»h since those awfol nights when it was lighted np
with the flames of the burning citj. Whoerer desires to form
a correct idea of the gamit ngUness of a Puritan meeting-house
of the 17th century could not do better than pay the Chapel
in Fetter Lane a vint. It is a place sanctified with not a
few precious memories. From its pulpit Bidiard Baxter
* preadied as a dying man to dying men, as though he might
^neyer see them more.' In it John Wesley in 1738 formed
his first Society, which was joined by so many Moravians
that they swamped his influence and oyerthrew his councils.
This, he was not the man to endure. He wrestled with the
invaders, he charged them with holding false doctrine, he
denounced them as Antinomians, but all in vun. They
maintained, ^that Believers are no more bound to obey the
* works of the law than the subjects of the King of England
* are bound to obey the laws of the King of France.' The
mass of the Society became estranged from him, and at last
he resolved to withdraw. After a serious address on Sunday,
20th July, 1740, in which he UAA them, their opinions were
flat contrary to the Word of God, he took his leave, drawing
only some score of members after him.
After Wesley^s departure the Moravians prospered abun-
dantly, teaching the doctrine of Salvation by Faith Alone
without qualification, and in the most superficial, mechanical,
and forensic sense. It is indeed to be regretted, that in such
a school Swedenborg received his early impressions of formal
theology ; for we often think, that the unconscious caricature and
the hardness of many of his subsequent views of the Religion
of Protestants are to be attributed to the converse and preach-
ing of the United Brethren in Fetter Lane in those days when
his mind was awakening to an interest in Divine things.
The Diary ends with October, 1744, and at the beginning
ROBSAHM^B STORY. 24S
of 1745, Noursc, a London bookseller, published the Third Part
of the * Regnuvi Animale^^ and the ' De Cultu et Amove DeV I
cannot discover that these works met with any notice whatever.
The * Oentleman^s Magazine ' merely registers their appearance.
Although 1744 is evidently from his Diary the year of
the beginning of Swedenborg's visions, he usually dated the
commencement of his seership from 1745. It may be, that of
the dreams and visions we have been reading he made small
account, regarding them as illusions, or as preliminaries of the
great change whereby the things of Heaven and Hell and the
World of Spirits became familiar to his eyes.
From Swedenborg we have no description of the moment-
ous event of 1745, but from his friend, M. Robsahm, of
Stockholm, we draw tlie following —
^ I inquired of Swedenborg where and in what manner his
* revelations began. He said —
^ '' I was in London and dined late at my usual quarters,
'^ where I had engaged a room, in which to prosecute my
^' studies in Natiiral Philosophy. I was hungry and ate with
^' great appetite. Towards the end of the meal, I remarked,
^^ that a kind of mist spread before my eyes, and I saw the
^' floor of my room covered with hideous reptiles, such as
'^ serpents, toads, and the like. I was astonished, having all
^' my wits about me, being perfectly conscious. The darkness
'^ attained its height and then passed away. I now saw a
'' Man sitting in the comer of the chamber. As I had
^^ thought myself alone, I was greatly frightened, when he
'' said to me, ^ Eat not so mucli.' My sight again became
" dim, but when I recovered it I found myself alone in my
'^ room. The unexpected alarm hastened my return home.
'' I did not suffer my landlprd to perceive that anything had
^' happened, but thought over the matter attentively, and was
^' not able to attribute it to chance or any physical cause.
^ ^' The following night tlie same Man appeared to me
r2
244 ROBSAHM'8 and BETBR^S 8T0RIES.
^ ^^ again. I was this time not at all alarmed. The Man said —
* " * I am God, the Lord, the Creator, and Redeemer of the
i u i World. I have chosen thee to mifold to men the Spiritual
* " * Sense of the Holy Scripture. I will myself dictate to
' " * thee, what thou shalt write.'
* " The same night the World of Spirits, Hell and Heaven,
* " were convincingly opened to me, where I found many
* " persons of my acquaintance of all conditions. From Uiat
* " day forth I gave up all worldly learning, and laboured only
^ ^' in spiritual things, according to what the Lord commanded
* " me to write. Thereafter the Lord daily opened the eyes
' " of my Spirit, to sec in perfect wake&lness what was going
* " on in the other World, and to converse, broad awake, with
* " Angels and Spirits." '
Dr. Beyer gives another account. He writes —
* The report of the Lord's personal appeai'ance before tlie
* Assessor I heard from his own mouth when he was an old
^ man. He said, that he saw Him sitting in purple and in
* majestic splendour near his bed, whUst He gave him com-
^ mission what to do. I asked him how long this appearance
* continued. He replied, that it lasted about a quarter of an
' hour. I also asked him whether the vivid splendour did not
* pain his eyes, which he denied In respect to the extra-
' ordinary case of the Lord appearing to him, and opening, in a
' wonderful manner, the internal and spiritual sight of His ser-
' vaiit, so as to enable him to see into the other World, I must
* o1)8erve, that this opening did not occur at once, but by degrees.'
Evidently these two stories refer to different experiences,
and tlicy must be taken for no more than they arc worth.
That to Beyer might almost stand for a version of the Divine
Vision at Delft, on April 6X7, 1744. That to Bobsalnn
meets with but very partial confirmation under Swedenborg's
own hand, in the following statement —
' A vision in tJie day time : of those who are devoted to
* oonviviality in eating^ and indtt'(je their appetites.
SWEDEN bOKU 8 OWN STORY. 245
^ In tho middle of the day at dinner an Angel spoke to me,
* and told me not to eat too nmch at table. Whilst he wag
* with me, there plainly appeared to me a kind of vapour
' steaming from the pores of my body. It was a most visible
' watery vapour, and fell downwards to the gromid upon the
' carpet, where it collected, and turned into divers vermin,
' which were gathered together under tlie table, and in a
' moment went off with a pop or noise. A fier}' light appeared
* within them, and a sound was heard, pronouncing, that all
* the vermin that could possibly be generated by unseemly
* appetite, were thus cast out of my body, and burnt up, and
' that I was now cleansed from them. Hence we may know
* what luxury and the like have for their bosom contents.
' 1745. April.'*
Most readers of this chapter of Dreams, Visions, Tempta*
tions, and Extasies will be ready to exclaim, Tlie man had
gone mad ! — an opinion I am careless to contest. I freely
ailmit, for it would be sheer perversity to do otherwise, that a
production like the Book of Dreams would be held as sufficient
warrant for the consignment of any author to a hmatic asylum;
but, having made this admission, I do not see that we are a
bit wiser, or that we have made the slightest advance towards
a comprehension of Swedenborg's case. It is only pert scien-
tific ignorance, wliich imagines, that Swedenborg's life and
writings for seven and twenty years subsequent to 1745 are
hi any way accounted for by asserting, that he was out of his
mind in 1744. Not all the jargon gathered from the most
learned treatises of the most enlightened ' mad Doctors ' will
avail to impose such a conclusion on any intellect in which
common sense is stronger than scientific credulity.
Considering, that Swedenborg was at this time at tho crisis
* From Swedenborg's ' Spiritiud Diary ^'^ No. 397. This entry was not
mode at the time in 1745, but more than two ycarH afterwards, on Christmai
Dav. 1747.
246 MAD OR NOT MAD?
of a great phjmcal, intellectual, and spiritual change, I have
no surprise to spare for anj aberrations of thought, speech, or
behaviour into which he may have fidlen. He was staggering
in confusion between old darkness and an excess of new Ught.
As Cariyle says — ^ Such tranritions are ever full of pain: thus
* the Eagle when he moults is sickly ; and, to attain his new
* beak, must harshly dash off the old one upon the rocks.' We
ought to remember what an assemblage of delicate conditions
are requiate to the perfection of sanity of mind, and how the
absence of one, or the slight derangement of a few, seriously
afiects it. In this respect the question is more easily raised
than answered. Whether indeed anybody is sane? We all
know how a dyspeptic stomach blackens, and how a bottle of
wino glorifies the world, and how the thoughts of the one state
are as folly to the other. The truth perhaps is, that mental,
like physical sanity, is merely an ideal perfection at which wo
all aim, and more or less nearly approach, but never attain ;
and that in some degree we are all crazed, as we arc all
diseased ; but as we are only numbered among the sick when
wo are worse than ordinary so only are we reckoned among
tho mad when our craze exceeds conventional bounds, and
becomes offensive or dangerous to our neighbours. I appre-
hend, that in the very nature of things, the changes Swedenborg
underwent were necessarily attended with violent deflections
from the centre of sanity. The most self-possessed philoso-
pher passing through a fever may be delirious, but we do not
judgt^ him by his sayings and doings in that delirium : nor is
Hwinlonlwrg to be judged by his Book of Dreams. He is a
fool, \vhi> comes to conclusions in the dust and din and agony
o( tht^ process, and has neither the patience nor forethought to
wait (or the rt^siilt. If Swedenborg had gone on writing to
1772 in tho atvle of 1744, there would certainly be no need
for Hiiv o( UH to trouble our heads about him ; but, as we shall
••.iMU»HVour to show, he emerged from the horrible valley of
ilUiiiiuiis and siH)otros, through which wc have been following
LONDON IN 1710 AND 1744. 247
him, not only with his old faculties purified and invigorated)
but with his inner eyes opened to the men and scenery of the
Inner World of Spirit, and with an intellect irradiated with
the very Wisdom of Heaven.
Nothing more can I find to tell concerning this second
visit of Swedenborg to London. The former one took place,
it will be remembered, in 1710, when Anne was Queen and he
a young man of twenty-two. A new generation had arisen
in England during the four and thirty years that had elapsed.
George II. was King. Newton, Flamsteed and Halley,
Addison, Steele and Defoe had gone to their rest. Pope,
who in 1710 was in the spring of his glory, was dying when
Swedenborg revisited London, his crooked body worn out
with asthma and spleen. Swift, an old man of seventy-seven,
was closing his last miserable days in Dublin. Isaac Watts
too was nearing the end of his busy and tranquil life in his
long-tried and happy retreat in the household of the Abneys,
at Theobalds. Old Sarah, the lioness of Marlborough, died at
eighty-five in 1744, and the year after she was followed by
Walpole, who had ruled and comforted England with peace
and prosperity for twenty years. Johnson, whom Queen Anne
touched for the King^s evil in 1710, was in 1744 drudging for
Cave on ^ The Gentleman's Magazine^'' and may have glanced
over the * Be CuUu et Amove Def and the * Regnum Animale^
if Nourse sent copies for review. The town in 1744 had
scarcely recovered from its interest in Richardson^s model
story of the virtuous * Pamela^^ or from its still greater inte-
rest in Fielding's account of Pamela's more virtuous rival
and brother, ^ Joseph Andrews.'* Young was printing Ins
^ Night Thowfhts^ and Thomson had left his * Seasons ' to write
plays that would not act. Science was not so well represented
in England in 1744 as in 1710. Bradley was Astronomer-
Royal. Martin Folkes was president of the Royal Society.
Sir Hans Sloane, a hale old man of eighty-four with yet nine
years of life in him, was living at Chelsea, and Swedenborg
248 fiCTTES TO STOCKBOLMf 1745.
Goold flcaroel J hare fiuled to hare visited him it Us iMwpiuble
abode mdA explored the treasiire» of Us muaeqin, Anson in
1744 bron^t home £1^250,000 in prise money, which was
borne in triomj^ through the streets to tfie Tower on thirtv-
two waggoiss, bat widiin a jear, in 1745, liondon was made
'sad with the news of the Duke of Camberland*s defeat at
FontenoT, followed b j the tidings in Jnl j that Prince Charles
Edward had sailed firom France to raise rebelHon in Scotland.
At the beginning oi Jnlj, 1745, Swedenborg took diip
fircmi London for Sweden, ai^ arrived in Stockholm on the
7th of August after an absence oi more than two years.
During the voyage his YL»<mis were entirely soi^nded.
( 249 )
CHAPTER II.
CALLED TO A NEW WORK.
On his return home Swedenborg resumed the duties of Us
Assessorship. Thus passed the last months of 1745, the
whole of 1746, and the beginning of 1747.
He conmienced to learn Hebrew, and read the Old Testa-
ment through once or twice in the original. As he read, and
as the wisdom of the Word was opened to him, he committed
to paper his perceptions. These * Adversaria '• he did not
publish, regarding them probably as studies for future works.
They abound in wavering .and indistinct views, which subse-
quent reflection decided or corrected.
The ' Adversaria ' furnish remarkable evidence of the
activity and fertility of their author's mind. Banging from
Genesis to Jeremiah, and forming in Dr. Tafel's edition nine
volumes, each containing about as much matter as this book,
they were produced in less than two years, the last entry
being dated 9th February, 1747. Swedenborg appears to
have thought through his pen.
Fie now felt that he had entered upon a vocation, which
no longer permitted him to discharge the duties of Assessor
to the Board of Mines, and in 1747 he sought and obtained
permission from King Frederick to retire. His petition to
the King contained two other requests, namely, that he might
* The ^ AdcerMria' have been printed and edited from Swedenborg's
manuscript8 by Dr. Tafcl, of Tubingen, 1)etween 1842 and 1854. A list of
the volumes and their contents wiU be found in the Appendix.
HSRCsmir fomatu nam htM nl ^ttmlmrj
artarhrd to the AjieMJcahiy. mdy tfcat tke pcrammL fer b»
redrement nmeht not be ji'mwiuMikid W anr nifitiaii to im
nnkor titk.
InalettertotheBeT.TIiOBuiHirtkjiit 1769 heezpfauns
\tm wfi^t, for tfau tmuocdoo —
^ Xj sole Tiew in diis ifitigmltfn was^ diat I mi^jkt be
^more at libertr to devote mjatM to diat new fimctioii, to
^ which the Lord had calkd me. On resgning m j oflke a
^ Ugber degree of nmk was offiEicd me^ but this I dedined,
^ lest it flboiild be the oecasioa of inspiriiig me with pride.^
The King granted Us icq[iieat, but in consjderaticm of
his thirty jears^ aerrice he pensioiied him off with his full
salary.
At the risk of some antidpadon oi omr narratiTe we mnst
here panse awhfle, in order that we ma j obtain a correct idea
of the nature and scope oi ^that function to which/ as
Swedenborg testifies, ^the Lord had called hinu'
His own declarations on the subject are abundant, one or
more being found in ahnost eyery book he wrote. Some of
these we had better read.
In the letter to Mr. Hartley, firom which we have just
quoted, after detailing his honours and his connections in
Sweden, he goes on to say —
^ Whatever of worldly honour and advantage may appear
^ in these, I hold them in low esteem when compared to the
^ honour of that sacred office, to which the Lord Himself has
^ called me, Who was graciously pleased to manifest Himself
' to mo, His unworthy servant, in a personal appearance in
^ the year 1743 ; to open in me a sight of the Spiritual World,
^ and to enable me to converse with Spirits and Angels ; and
^ this privilege has been continued to me to this day (1769).
^ From that time I began to print and publish various un-
^ known Arcana, that have been either seen by me, or revealed
^ to me, concerning Heaven and Hell ; the state of men after
CLAIMS SPIRITUAL VISION. 251
* death ; the true Worship of God *y the Spiritual Sense of the
« Scriptures ; and many other important truths tending to
* salvation and true wisdom.'
Again in 1749 he writes —
* Of the Lord's divine mercy, it has been granted me, now
*for several years, to be constantly and uninterruptedly in
' company with Spirits and Angels, hearing them converse
^ with each other, and conversing with them. Hence it has been
^ permitted me to hear and see things in another life which
* are astonishing, and which have never before come to the
^ knowledge of any man, nor entered into his imagination. I
* have been there instructed concerning different kinds of
* Spirits, and the state of Souls after death — concerning Hell,
' or the lamentable state of the unfaithful — concerning Heaven,
* or the most happy state of the faithful — and, particularly,
* concerning the Doctrine of Faith, which is acknowledged
* throughout all Heaven.'*
Again —
' I am well aware, that many persons will insist, that it is
' impossible for any one to converse with Spirits and Angels
' during his life in the Body ; many, that such intercourse
' must be mere fancy and illusion ; some that I have invented
' such relations to gain credit ; whilst others will make other
* objections ; for all these, however, I care not, since I have
' seen, heard, and had sensible experience of what I am about
' to declare.
* We are created by the Lord so that during our life in the
* Body we may converse with Spirits and Angels, as indeed
^ was the habit of the people of the most ancient times
* But as they in process of time immersed themselves in cor-
* porcal and worldly things, their intercourse with Spirits
* ceased. Nevertheless it may be resumed as soon as the
* things which hinder are removed.' t
* ' Arcana Caslestiit,' No. 5. t * Arcana OoBUrtia,' Nofl. 68, 69.
' Tint: ' 'Timi.mnumi
*i]e ~^ rrn : isdeect naiiv . "nu mb inm viiiiuL die illiuiiJk
II ieauL -vtiica dsiasBt -^meailr in die vrKufl^ wise, jfcoiilil
r md vfrnnn die «iiioie in iusst ami oudu it
iiezziiitced :]ie in* dnneen Tiact oa jaeodalB
mil i» y^-DTfirsm vixk dieni jft •ine num.
aaotiier: mil ro iKfc die "*iTinm vinczL an* in die Kesvens
aoil die Herilfr: mil ?ij iiscriiie diem mm experiemx. in
die hope dut iifaunmee msv^ be tmiiehtenetL ami xncrediilitT
ifiasipace^L
' I oiiTe ieen i diunsami dme& diac \Tiggb arc Xen wrdi-
out die le^KfC «iiiference having iet*n diem in foil
wakLiTiine<«w when I wot^ hi die <xerd« at ereiy jeiuse and
m a rs^iCe -it dear pereepdun."*
Agairu hi 17.3S —
* In onlen diat Man mav be eunvmced of die reality of
m m
^ ]i& ai^r Jeadu it has been gnranted me to have tellowship
^ with .Vu{;^Lk and to speak widi thone wht> are in Hell, and
^ thL» now tvr uianv vears^ sometimes eontinaooslv from mom-
^ Lug till evening* and thos to be instructed concerning Heaven
" and Hell.
' Men a.sk« ^ WTioever came from Heaven to tell us, that
' '^ it exists V WTiat is Hell ? Is it anythmg at all ? What
* '" is the meaning of Man being tormented with eternal fire ?
' •' What is the Day of Judgement "? Has it not been expected
' "• for ages in vain V Questions such as these imply complete
• denial. Lest therefore thev who think thus, (as do many
' who are reputed skilful and learned), should any longer seduce
' the simple in faith and heart, and induce infernal darkness
• * JJmvtH ahd Bell,* Nos. 1 and 74.
AFTEK DEATH MEN ARE MEN AS BEFORE. 253
* concerning God, Heaven, Eternal Life, and other subjects
* dependent on them, the Interiors of my Spirit have been
* opened by the Lord, and thus I have been allowed to speak
^ with all the dead whom I ever knew in the bodily life, with
' some for months, and with some for a year, and also with so
* many others, that I should come short if I reckoned them at
* a hundred thousand, of whom many were in the Heavens,
' and many in the Hells. I have also spoken witli some two
' days after their decease, and told them that solemn prepara-
' tions were then making for their funerals ; to which they
' said, that it was well to reject that which had served them
' for a body in tlie World : and they desired me to declare
' that they were not dead, but alive and equally men as
* before, and did not know that they had lost anything, since
' they are in a Body and possess Senses as before, with like
' intellect, will, thoughts, affections, sensations, pleasures, and
' desires as when living in the World.'*
Again, ten years afterwards, in 1768 he writes —
* I am aware that many, who read these pages, will believe
' they are fictions of the imagination ; but I solemnly declare
* tliey are not fictions, but were truly done and seen ; and that
* I saw them, not in any state of the mind asleep, but in a state
' of perfect wakefulness ; for it has pleased the Lord to manifest
' Himself to me, and to send ine to teach the things relating
* to the New Church, which is meant by the New Jerusalem
' in the Revelation : for which purpose He has opened the
* Interiors of my Mind and Spirit; by virtue of which privilege
' it has been granted me to be in the Spiritual World with
' Angels, and at the same time in the Natural World with
* Men, and tliis now for twenty-five years. 't
Finally, in his 83rd year in 1771, he attests —
' Since the Lord cannot manifest Himself in person, and
' yet He has foretold, that He would come and establish a
* '//</*( Juilffement^^ No. 15. f ' ('unptffuU Lovt^^ No. 1.
2S4r :3r *«WEiHDrB0B6 3 rHC .^^cosd aoyest.
New CBmrcfiu ^vineiL la ^im ^Smw h i iiiiii iii it noUows^ tint
\m will r^feec dun :)^ tbe JBBnnneiiiaiinr 'it .l maiu who i»
Ub UjMiiiHi iiiiiFiii^ bnc aioB r» uakit xbeoL komwn. br the
* Tlisctfae Li&M. niamBesfied Hnniiftif beibre me Hi» .^enrant^
tlitt He Jxvpobaxed me :x> diia «)tfice. and atterwanift iipened
die 4^xt •Ml' orr Spirit, dad do let me Lihd die SpiTftnal
W«)EiiL p^iiiuiiiijg me :o ma ds Hesv^n^ and die HeOa^
and aifl» to coorefse widi. .VngrJ* and :ipizit&» and dii» now
ainiimiailr cbr manr vBeca^ I attest in irmli: and £brdier.
dist mun die tirtt livr -jt* mcr oadl co dm <iiBoe* I have never
useBived aaythiiiy rekmi^ to die Doetniie» at diat Omreh
IZDin any- AmgeL bat mxm die Laid aione^ wiule I was
^leaiiini^ die W«inL**
Tlieae extiafim anfiraendv define die daimft^ whidL Swe-
dmibor^ ^vxdi dmpiiciiy, <3inniffl» and padence iterated and
reiterated tbr rwencv-fwron vearsw trrint 174^ ru his death.
Iknowriifht wed die euntemptanddiepirr widi wiiiiJi such.
TtairmpfiTTf ara iead». and that dieir bitcoest isomers are ix>and^
not -MWiing die Saddnceesi^ not among \ihi€» who are m open
doubt about God and Ktenml Ufia^ bu% among the Phariaees^
among dioM who moet londbr con&» bodi^ and who are readv
U> light tike dgers for every dired of wixuler or miracle within
the boards of the Bible. I know how per&cdv useless it is
to plead with them for attention to Swedenborg on the ground
that the Scriptures abound Izom end to end with claims as
manreUous as his y for it is dieir settled conviction^ that im-
mediate communion of God with Man ceased with BiUe times,
and that ;»nce John left Patmos the world has been under a
totally now n.>gime. To invite them therefore to believCi that
a man, who lived Ict^s than a century ago, who walked London
Htrvots in cocked hat and periwig, coat and breeches, sword
» « 7V«M Ckrutiam BeUgUm,' No. 779.
SWEDENBORQ MUST BE TRIED. 255
and buckles, was a Servant of God and a Seer of Angels, is
to them like an invitation to become the dupes of a lunatic or
impostor. I may be allowed to assure all such readers, that I
have no wish whatever to gain their sufirage for Swedenborg.
Even though their credence might turn out as valiant and
thorough-going as that which they accord to the Bible I could
have neither trust nor pleasure in it. There are many, who
believe in Swedenborg just as they believe in the Bible, and
who think the Alpha and the Omega of communicable Divine
Wisdom terminated with his last page in 1772; and I have
no wish to add to their number. The rampant and exclusive
faith of these people in orthodox wonders proves, by its very
intolerance of kindred wonders, its own idiocy and emptiness,
and that it is merely a tradition and a superstition with a dead
Bible and a smothered Inspiration for a fetish.
Yet at the same time I know with what inevitable and
justifiable suspicion the kindliest, most reasonable and most
liberal souls must hear these claims of Swedenborg advanced ;
for they are not only claims, which he shares with the Prophets
and Apostles of old, but with all manner of enthusiasts and
deceivers. As Carlyle forcibly observes —
^ A poor man in our day has many gods foisted upon
him ; and big voices bid him, " Worship, or be !" in a
menacing and confusing manner. What shall he do? By
far the greater part of said gods, current in the public,
whether canonised by Pope or Populus, are mere dumb
Apises and beatified Prize-oxen ; — ^nay, some of them, who
have articulate faculty, are devils instead of gods. A poor
man that would save his soul alive is reduced to the sad
necessity of sharply trying his gods whether they are divine
or not; which is a terrible pass for mankind, and lays an
awfnl problem upon each man. The man must do it how-
ever. At his own peril he will have to do this problem,
which is one of the awfullest ; and his neighbours, all but a
most select portion of them, portion generally not clad in
' ftifeua -umji. ^aa le it lerr ^o .10 letp ^o !iixzL in it; ris;r.
- -stthpT vi'il onnitHr under ixm. n c la matters ^.^
• -^hamlr -npti ouat T'^^MienDiinr ie. Jiit How- Twi;?
m\\ rri-r -tprtlft rhettier le Tuki-^i TTtH -jji:r»'ii. ^r Tas -^mr «it
^'irort. i ."Pail itinie^:«TurrT» •! m 'mdite ma niLtht-matu.'
-•M^nihlr •n^'urpTi a iiipi oiiirovp^rs^- ua -r» Trietiier ir aot ik
•PTtjuu <hi>4^ voiUiL it k -.Train :r»»r, vrifn i iiain .nan iintki*
•■hmnff}! "Ij« paiTitri lin ■i"'Ti^. " "V^r" ul "lus ^«l^fat•^ / Trv
•* m MiP ihof-. ' yiif -init^ Tia "ntni in. ind *tie mesdon w:ii*
4^tl#-/i n * T.cpi V Xr -iiDninir 'H ti "hi* rrmr •v^tii r>frtin:t
Hftu*nm .iw»» iiiortifr ikin. Si "v* -iioiud lavr* .jrpr^niMi^^ or^
."^wvii'Tili/jrjr. :i'»r •^'^ r^uk ^i^/inr ium, )iir )^ r-in^firs* 'crV/i iiim
in fhow. viok.-i ♦'iir'iinrh •vriicrn "i** i^:'''*. uid in ■vTiicb his .'Lalii!!»
'*vnni"»i»r.* AT lit 'hft V:ir .»f itnifaf* ir •r»^«Lii>iiirr "vicii »-;au:li
in^iiir-r'* privin* inniinoa inii im(iL'r^tantun:r.
fit ^Ur '»/i»ir«* '»f" rin*rH* pjur*>* ir will :)•? our :ii.sinte*« to nrunie
.'10 '*/f>«'>«*itir.n '»f .'I'v-iii-nhi.Tz -* teaiJifn^r*. md a: Ln? cl«>« we
nriH'/, fo jniu-.h l»*?t.rftr purpiir«* than at)w. :ia^** '44>g:»^ talk over
f Ha r'!i'«oTi;i.M#n)r'jM. or otherwiiie. of hi.-* •.■Lli:!;* : tut alike tor
yhf' t'\m.i'\^i\ftno{ our riArrative ami tor the reuiperinir 01 thoih.*
fpff*\itf\\tt'.A. whir.h the mo4t catholic* in this seep deal a^\
/'Hnnof 111 If <rir/:nain a^^ainiit one who writes widi sueh pre-
Nin4iori4, \t rriAy ^i^ wf:ll U> expadate a little on die meaniii;^;
l''ir<t, Tliat ht'. dsiWy visited the Spiritual Worid and made
M^/|fiM)iihirM'<T wit.ii itH liihaliitantfl; and —
Htrowly Tlint he wan directly appointed bv God to descril)e
lit M<^fi till*. )U'i'.uv.ry of Heaven and Hell and the World of
MjiifiU, and tin- liveH of their Inhabitants; and that through
him thii Lord .Ichuh (Mirirtt makes His second advent for the
liiiitiliitKin of a New (yhitreli dem'rilK^d in the Apocalypse under
thi« li^nrr of the New .leruHdctn.
WHERE 18 THE SPIRITUAL WORLD ? 257
When it is first told any one, that Swedenborg visited
Heaven and Hell, and talked with Angels and Devils, the
very terms of the statement appear to cany their own con-
fiitation. The hearer, a^uming that the Spiritual World is
farther off than Australia or Japan, or the Sun or Stars, at
once concludes as incredible, that a man abiding in Stockholm
London or Amsterdam, should at the same time be a traveller
in that distant World, and hold converse with the Men and
Women thereof.
This ready judgement with which Swedenborg's. claim is
usually greeted, is a perfect example of Prejudice pure and
simple. No comprehension of his statement is attempted ; an
absurdity is imputed to him, and a scoff follows.
To judge truly we must inquire first. What he meant by
the Spiritual World, and next. How he saw into it. When his
meaning is understood,, it wiU, we think, be allowed (admitting
his doctrine true), that it was no more wonderful, that he
should see Heaven than that he saw Holland; or, that he
should talk with Spirits than that he talked with Swedes.
Swedenborg accepts the broad division prescribed by
common-sense between Matter and Mind ; the one Seen, the
other Unseen. Matter we can see and handle; Mind we
cannot ; but by every sensation ranging from pleasure to pain^
we know that it is. Under Mind are included Love, Reason
and Memory; but Love, however great, adds neither to weight
nor stature; Beason, however powerful, needs no room for
working; and Memory, though stored with the experience
and learning of a life-time, can find neither yard nor balance
to appreciate its increase; yet Love, Reason and Memory
are existences, the veriest realities, although no chemist nor
physiologist by his most delicate tests can in any way approach
unto them.
Now although Love, Reason and Memory are in the
primary sense the Spiritual World, we are not therefore to
imagine, that Swedenborg, by seeing the Spiritual World,
S
258 THE FINER 8UBSTANCE8 OF NATURE.
meant that he saw actual LoYe^ Reason or Memory.* These
by their very nature must be as invisible in Heaven as on
Earth. What, then, did he mean ?
Between our Love, Reason and Memory and our Bodies of
flesh and blood there are many intermediate existences. Man
has been well defined as a Summary of the Universe ; so that
jfrom his Love or Will at the inmost, to his Hair and Nails at
the outmost, Creation is comprised in epitome from end to end*
Granting, then, that it was not in the Universe at its
outmost Matter, nor in its inmost Mind, that Swedeuborg's
visible Heaven and Hell lay, we must look for them some-
where in the intermediate existences between the extremes of
Matter and Mind ; and, as Man is the Summary of Creation,
we ought to find these intermediates embodied in his con-
stitution ; hence says Swedenborg —
^ Man at birth puts on the grosser substances of Nature,
* his Body consisting of such. These grosser substances by
' death he puts ofl^, but retains the purer substances of Nature,
* which are next to those that are Spiritual. These purer
' substances serve thereafter as his Body, the continent and
* expression ot his Mind.' t
What these purer substances are he does not tell us. Had
he not discarded the doctrine of ' The Ptincipia^ we might
have inquired whether the inner Body, which escapes from its
sheath at death, is organized from Ether, or the Magnetic
Element, or the First Element, or Points, or from some other
imponderable. It might be, that because the purer substances
of Nature were unknown to science, there were no names to fit
them. At any rate it is for us to consider the bodies of the
Angels and Devils with whom he spoke as thus constructed ;
* ' Tho AngolR cannot see Love Tiith their eyes, but instead of Love they
* see what corresponds to it.* ' Divine Love and Wisdom,* No. 87.
f*JMvine Providence; No. 220; see also 'True Christian JRcliyion,'
No. 10S.
SPIRIT IS THE CAUSE OF MATTER. 259
and to think of the inmost substances of this Natural World as
forming the ground, the bases, the floors, the continents, the
cuticles of the visible objects of the Spfantual World.
Whilst it is common to speak of the Spiritual World as
far off, beyond reckoning, Swedenborg declares it to be the
life and cause of the Natural World; just as really and as
intimately as a Man^s Spirit is the life and cause of his Body.
He maintains that every drop of water and every grain of
sand has a spiritual existence in the Spiritual World ; that,
in a word, the Material World is the Body of the Spiritual
World, and that in Nature there is nothing which was not
first in Spirit. Hence, writing of the perfect unity, corre-
spondence and dependence of the Inner and Outer Worlds,
he says —
* The whole Natural World corresponds to the Spiritual
* World collectively and in every part ; for the Natural World
^ exists and subsists from the Spiritual World, just as an effect
* does from its cause.
* All things which exist in Nature, from the least to the
* greatest, exist and subsist from the Spiritual World, and
* both Worlds from the Divine.
' Whenever I have been in company with Angels, the
^ objects in Heaven appeared so exactly like those in the
* World, that I knew no other tlian that I was on Earth.'*
It may be said. Allowing the nearness, union and perfect
correspondence of the Spiritual World with the Material
World now under our eyes. Where is the space of its exist-
ence ? and. By what Sun is it lighted up ?
The finer substances of Nature, it has been observed, form
the gross outsides of Spirit ; and as we ascend from earthy to
aerial existences, and thence to heat, light and electricity, the
notions of space, which we attach to flesh and blood, and bricks
and mortar, become more and more inapplicable. A man at
» * Heaven and Hell,' Nor. 89, 106 and 174.
s2
2W HPACE IN TFfE SPIRITUAL WORLD.
(IcAtli, t<*Mtifi(>H Hwodonborg, escapes from his Material BodNr
an from a rr^nt or worn-out vesture, carrying with him
nicinlN*r, faculty and function complete, with not one wai
yoX the c^irpne U as heavy as when he dwelt therein. ' Xatore,^
hit Mays, ^ commcnccH from the 8un,' but Spirit is above Nature
and our glorious Hun to the Angels is ' as somewhat of thidc
^ darkni*MM/ * I lenee we need not be surprised when he infoims
UM, that— •
^ Althou^li all thin^R in Heaven appear to be in place and
* in H\nu'At i*.xtivt\y aH in the World (with this difference, that
^ tli«y are in Mniall(*r fonnsf) "till the Angels have no idea of
^ place and Hpacr. f . . . . But whereas Angels and Spirits
* nee with their eyes as Men do, and objects cannot be seen
* but in Hpar(% tlioreforo in the Spiritual World there appear
^ Hpiices lik(} the Hpaces on Earth ; which, nevertheless, are not
* spaces but appearances ; for they are not fixed and stationary
* as on Karth ; they may be lengthened and shortened, changed
' and varied, and cannot be determined by mea8ure/§
The phenomena of light and of other imponderables will
suggest many hints as to the possibility of the existence of
this Inner World, where are all the pleasant appearances of
space, without any of the dreary reality whereby in this
World long months are fixed between friends in England and
Australia ; except indeed when they call to their aid one of
Nature's finer substances through the electric wire.
' If in the Spiritual World two desire intensely to see each
* other, that desire at once brings about a meeting. When
* any Angel goes from one place to another, whether it is in
' his own city, or in the courts, or the gardens, or to others out
^ of his own city, he arrives sooner or later just as he is ardent
' or indifferent, the way itself being shortened or lengthened
* in proportion.
• 'Heaven and Hell,' Nou. llGand 122. f * Divine Love and Wisdom,' No. 52.
\ • Heaven and ffeO,* No. 191 . J * Divine Lore and Wisfiom,' No. 7.
THE ACTION OF MIND ON THE WORLD. 261
* Changes of place in the Spiritual World are effected by
' changes of the Mind. By such changes I also have been
* conducted by the Lord into the Heavens, and to various
* Earths in the Universe ; but I was present as to the Spirit
* only, whilst my Body remained in the same place. All the
' Angels move in this manner, and hence have no distances.
' Change of place being only change of state, it is evident
.* that approximations in the Spiritual World arise from simili-
^ tudes of Mind and removals from dissimilitudes ; and thus
* spaces are merely signs of inner differences From
* this cause alone the Hells are altogether separated from the
* Heavens.'*
The Spiritual World throughout he represents as perfectly
flexile under the action of the Minds of its Inhabitants. The
character of a Spirit, he tells us, is reproduced in everything
which surrounds him. Even here, we find, nations and
individuals depicting their inner life on the face of the Outer
World. The physiognomist divines the unseen Mind from
the features, dress, manners, and garniture ; he reads the
cause in its effects. But in the Material World the Mind is
hindered and stiffened in its outcome by the grossness of the
element through which it works, and only the stronger and
more persistent affections reach the surface. In the Spiritual
World every emotion, every thought instantly appears on the
countenance, and diffuses its influence over body, dress, ftimi-
ture, and landscape, — all, in fact, with which the Mind is in
connection. Hence the Mind which is a Heaven, repeats
itself in external loveliness and order, and a Mind which is a
Hell, in external ugliness and disorder.
As has been said, there is nothing in Nature which is not
first in Spirit; that all things in Nature are produced from
correspondent things in Spirit; it follows as a consequence,
that there is a Spiritual Sun which lights the Spiritual World
• * Heaven and HO,* Nos. 192^.
262 THE LIGHT OF THE SPIRITUAL SUN.
and is the origin and life of our Natural Sun and all the other
Suns of the Natural Universe. Thus Swedenborg states —
^ There is one only substance, the source of aD things, and
* the Sun of the Spiritual World is that substance. . . . That
^ Sun is the first of Creation ; all other things proceed firom
^it, and depend on it; the Natural Suns are merely its
* mediums or substitutes.*
* They who think only from Nature cannot comprehend,
^ that there is light in Heaven, when yet that light far exceeds
*the mid-day light of the World. I have often seen it.
* When I first heard the Angels say, that the light of the
* World is little better than shade in comparison with the
* light of Heaven I wondered ; but since I have seen it, I can
^ testify that it is so. Its whiteness and brightness surpass all
^description, and eveiything which I have seen in Heaven
* appeared more clearly, and therefore more distinctly, in that
^ light, than natural objects appear on Earth. 'f
Such is the constitution of the Spiritual World of which
he professed himself a denken : the means whereby he attamed
the privilege are thus explained.
Terrestrial Man, being a Summary of the Universe,
comprising in epitome with Mind and Body every degree
of Creation, has in him all that an Angel — or Devil — has,
plus a Material Body. Death merely strips off that overcoat
and reveals the Angel^-or Devil. His Body of flesh and
blood is transfused in every particle and tissue by a Spiritual
Body, whose externals are woven from the finer substances of
Nature. He is at once an Inhabitant of Two Worlds. Out-
wardly he is a subject of the Sun of Nature ; inwardly he is
a subject of the Sun of Spirit. Outwardly he may be a
Swede, a Dutchman, or an Englishman ; inwardly he is an
Angel or Devil, associated with kindred Spirits in Heaven or
HeU.
• •DivmeLoveand Wmtom,' Noa. 300, 152-S. f 'BeavenondHeU,* No. 126.
SW£D£NBOKQ AMPHIBIOUS. 263
What Swedenborg then t^ks us to believe, is, that this fact,
which will become manifest to every one of us at the hour
of our decease, may be anticipated during our present life in
Nature ; that in a word, the Spiritual Body may for a season
be partially relieved from its Material vesture ; and the Inner
Eye and the Inner Ear enter into the Sights and Sounds, and
the Inner Lungs breathe the Air, of the Spiritual World ; and
afterwards resume their functions submerged anew in the
organs of the flesh.
Such, he alleges, was the means whereby he visited the
Inner World habitually, and returned to the affsdrs of the
Outer. His claim was a claim to amphiblousness ; to life in
Spirit and Nature alternately.
The possession by him of this power of easy transition of
sense and consciousness from the Lower to the Upper World
arose, it would appear, from some peculiarities in his physical
organization. In * The Animal Kingdom ' he spoke much of
the concord existing between Thought and Respiration, be-
tween the motion of the Brain and the motion of the Lungs.
His attention was drawn to these phenomena by the marked
illustration, which they found in his own system. The sus-
pension of respiration under deep thought, common to all men,
was preternaturally developed in him ; and in his Diary he
makes a variety of observations on his case ; as for instance —
* My respiration has been so formed by the Lord, as to
' enable me to breathe inwardly for a long time without
' the aid of the external air, my respiration being directed
' within, and my outward senses, as well as actions, still con-
* tinning in their vigour, which is only possible with persons,
' who have been so formed by the Lord I have also
' been instructed, that my breathing was so directed, without
* my being aware of it, in order to enable me to be with
' Spirits, and to speak with them It has been shewn
' me that each of the bodily senses has its peculiar action from
' respiration. Moreover it was granted me to gather
264 SWEDENBOBG^S ABNORMAL RE8PIBATI0K.
' the same thing from much experience before I spoke with
^ Spirits, and to see that breathing corresponds with thought ;
* as for example during my childhood, when I tried purposely
^ to hold mj breath, also at morning and evening prayers, and
^ when I attempted to make the rhythm of my breath correspond
^ with my heart's pulsation, in which case my understanding^
^ began almost to be obliterated. Furthermore afterwards,
'when I was writing and using my imagination, at which
' time I could observe that I held my breath, which became
* in a manner tacit.**
Again, he tells us, that there are many species of respira-
tions inducing divers introductions to the Spirits and Angels,
with whom the Lungs conspire ;t- and goes on to say, that he
was at first habituated to insensible breathing in his infancy,
when at morning and evening prayers, and occasionally after-
wards, when exploring the concordance between the Heart,
Lungs, and Brain, and particulariy when writing his physios-
logical works ; that for a number of years, beginning with
his childhood, he was introduced to internal respiration mainly
by intense speculations, in which breathing stops, for other-
wise intense thought is impossible. When Heaven was
opened to him, and he spoke with Spirits, sometimes for
noariy an hour he scarcely breathed at all. The scmie phe-
nomena occurred when he was going to sleep, and he thinkB
that his preparation wont forward during repose. So various
was his breiithing, so obedient did it become, that he thereby
obtaine<l tlie range of the Higher Worid, and access to all its
Spheres.^
Prolonged suspension of respiration is displayed in persons
who fall into trance, in which state the Body seems dead, and
• 'ZHarium J^rituah,* Nos. 3,317, 8,320, September 25, 1748.
t ' The internal respiration of the Good is in Heayen, and of the Evil in
« HeH.' < Divina Love and WUdom,' No. 393.
I * Piarmm S^Himle,' No. 3,464, October 4, 1748,
SPIRIT VISION VERY COMMON. 265
on return to consciousness they frequently bring back stifnge
fragments of other-world experience; also in the Hindoo
Yogi, of whom wonderful tales are told of their interment for
months, without food or air, and then of their return to life,
after certain secret processes ; and also in the hybernation of
animals, or their breathless winter sleep.
Swedenborg although peculiar in the freedom and ease
with which he exercised his faculty of double sight is far from
unique. Imlac says —
* That the dead are seen no more I will not undertake to
' maintain against the concurrent and unvaried testimony of
^ all ages and of all nations. There is no people, rude or
^ learned, among whom apparitions of the dead are not related
^ and believed. This opinion, which perhaps prevails as far as
' human nature is diffused, could become universal only by its
* truth : those that never heard of one another would not have
' agreed in a tale which nothing but experience can make
' credible. That it is doubted by single cavillers, can very
* little weaken the general evidence ; and some who deny it
* with their tongues confess it by their fears.'*
History and biography abound in instances of vision into
the Spiritual World. The Bible is strewn thick with cases
from end to end. There is scarcely a family without its sacred
traditions of ghostly manifestations ; and modem clairvoyance
and spiritualism supply a multitude of experiences in illustra-
tion and confirmation of Swedenborg's, which cavillers will
find it easier to ridicule than to examine and understand.
Between most Seers and Swedenborg there is this differ-
ence, however ; their faculty of Inner Vision has been exer-
cised momentarily, or occasionally, or has been inAiced by
artificial effort, whilst his was natural, we may say, congenital,
was developed unsought, and was enjoyed uninterruptedly, or
* ImUc, in Dr. Johnson's * BaneUu, IHimee of Ahyiivda^^ poMUhed
April, 1759.
4W TtlK IMXKK JlXD OCTSB BODIES.
iie^tf^ au« t^ die lMti(e tem of tiiwitf «f Ott TMn. As little
iudiKiHXKiHl tu tuii^i^i^' hi» v>iBc«i aft his fiidier^ the Bishop, we
thnt hiuk >m villus —
^ t1\o l.v>i\t'» ;ip(K:^artuKV« and the opening: to me <^ the
^ S)KvitutU Wortd, i» more exvt^Uent than all Miracles, An
^ v>\|K>i't\>iKv Uko uiUK\ m> v>iie fitMn Creation has had. The
^ un>i\ \^i ih\> VWIdvu A^ conversed indeed with Angels, but
^ iftiiK hi ikutiiml ti^t ; but to me it has been granted to be in
^ ii|Mi Uiu^l .«uil luaui'til li^t at the :»me time. Bt this ex-
^ (H'liuiKH) I hi^vo hwu cuabled to see the wonderful things of
^ Uv>i«\on, aiul to bo iuuou^ .Vngels as one of themselves,
^ iMul u» loi^tu IViUha iu Li^t itself^ and diius to see and teach
^ Uu>u^ lUkd to b<> led ot* the Lord.
^ I'ho ihiu^ rovetJed m mv Writings are not Miracles,
^ biHH^uiH) oNoi'v >l;uk iWL to his Spirit IS ui the Spiritual Worlds
^ wilhi^ui 'topiU'Htiou trom his Body in the Natural World;
^ but ill uiv vHwio there has been a certain separation, only
^ Kov^ovor t^ U> the l'uders(auding« or intellectual part of my
^ Mkud, (Uul uoc itai to the Will, or voiuutary part.**
Wo ukiks conclude^ that had the separation gone on to
tho Will^ death would have ensued^ fi^r then die connection
bot^ivu tho kuuor and the iHiter Bodies would have been
^ i \kik\x\ bo tta^i^ ^ conversed with spirits as a Spirit, and
^ iu doiikg !io ihiw kui^w uo other than that 1 was one of them-
^ Melv\v«. Mv kuWrior Bodv thev saw. but mv Material Body
^ wai* lu visible to theui.t
Thv^Hi^ who indulge iu deep meditations^ at such times
luake thiHV ap(HHunjUK*e in the Spiritual World
^ Kvory Mau as to his Spirit is iu si,Hriety with Spirits, even
' white be lives iu the Bod}\ and at death he openly appears
^ iu the ivuijiany v>f those Spirits with whom he has been
• * i)ummm ^JwitiHik* At^fsnOix, IWs. vii* Vol. I., p. 157, ISS.
t 'ilM«»aiiMirAV/Ka436.
OPENING OF THE INNER ETES. 267
^ tacitly associated. During his worldly life he is not seen in
* Spirit because he is immersed in Nature. They however,
^ who are given to intense and abstract thought, sometimes
* appear in their own spiritual society, because they are then
' in the Spirit. These are easily distinguished from the Spirits,
* who are actually there, for they walk about like persons in
^ profound contemplation, silent and regardless of others, as
^ though they did not see them, and when any Spirit accosts
* them, they instantly vanish.'*
Next time we are in ' a brown study ' and are suddenly
started into external consciousness, let us remember where we
have been, and how we were awakened.
In profound thought, as has been observed, respiration
becomes slow, tacit, and almost or entirely suspended. The
elevation of the Inner above the Outer Body in a measure
takes place, and were it only suflSciently carried forward open
and free intercourse with the Spiritual World would be the
result.
An excellent illustration of the presence of the Spiritual
World behind the veil of Nature and the means and readiness
with which it may be discerned is found in 2 Kings, vi. 13-17.
Elisha, compassed about with horses, chariots and a great
host, sent by the King of Syria to seize him, was on a moun-
tain with his servant, who, full of terror, exclaimed, " Alas !
" my master, how shall we do ?" And he answered, " Fear
" not, for they that be with us are more than they that be with
" them." And Elisha prayed, and said, " Lord, I pray Thee
" open his eyes^ that he may see." And the Lord opened the
eyes of the yoimg man, and he saw : and behold the mountain
full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha.t
• 'Heaven and Hell,' No. 438.
t Swcdenborg explains all the Angelio Manifestations recorded in the
Scriptures by this opening of the spiritual sight.
' It must be observed, ' he writes, ' that Angels cannot be seen by Man
' with his bodily eyes, but only with the eyes of the £^irit which is within
268 SWEDENBOBG CALLED BY THE LORD.
The natural ejes of the joung man were open, sajs
Swedenborg, for, How otherwise could he have seen the
Syrian host, and have been afraid? Elisha prayed that his
eyes mi^ht be opened. What eyes? Simply the eyes of his
Spirit, which done, he was enabled to perceive the heavenly
guardianship extended over his master.
These notes may in a measure help to bring Swedenborg's
Seership within our comprehension, as merely a high and
peculiar developement of powers latent in U9 all.
There are many who will hear with some composure, that
Swedenborg was acqudnted with the People of Heaven and
Hell ; but for his assertion, that his Spiritual Travels were
prosecuted under an immediate Divine commission, they have
no tolerance. This scepticism about Divine appointments
calls for some notice. ,
There are some twenty thousand clergymen in England.
Every one of them at his ordination was addressed by the
Bishop as " Called to the high Dignity, and the weighty Office
" and Charge of Messenger, Watchman and Steward of the
" Lord ;" and when each of them was asked by the Bishop,
** Do you think in your heart, that you be truly called accord-
" ing to the Will of our Lord Jesus Christ, to the Order and
' him This is effected in a moment, when it pleases the Lord that
' a man should see spiritual things ; and in this case he knows no other,
* than that he sees with the eyes of the Body. Thus Angels were seen hy
' Abraham, Lot, Manoah, and the Prophets ; and thus the Lord was seen by
' His Disciples after His resurrection ; and in this manner, also, Angels have
'been seen by me.* — * Heaven and HeU,^ No. 76.
This appears to be too broad a generalization. Granting that the
Spiritual World and its People may be seen by the unsheathing of the
spiritual eyes. May not Spirits make themselyes manifest to the natural eyes
by a converse process? by clothing themselves with Nature? by adding
gpposser to the finer substances of Nature, which compose the externals of
their spiritual bodies until they become visible on earth ? I apprehend that
the appearance of ghosts as pale, ethereal spectres, is thus to be explained,
and not by the opening of the spiritual sight of those who see them. Several
of the modem ' iplritiial manifestations' are in this way to be accounted for.
CALLED OF THE LORD. 269
" Ministry of the Priesthood?" the answer of each was, " I
" think it." Every Bishop and Archbishop at his inaugura-
tion has professed obedience to the same Divine Voice, and
solemnly asserted, ^^ I am persuaded, that I am called to
^^ this ministration according to the will of our Lord JesuB
" Christ." Every Dissenting Minister, in one form or other,
has made a simUar acknowledgement of a Divine Summons,
and the like is true of every Priest of Rome.
Swedenborg therefore reporting himself as * Called and
^ sent of God' is not singular. He has a host of comrades,
and any sneers at his expense have a sweeping application.
'Called and sent of Godl' Why should these words
startle any as incredible ? Is not every one sent of Grod, who
does his duty? Is not God manifested in every one, who
obeys the Divine Will ?
The length and breadth of the intellectual atheism pre-
valent at this day is perfectly astounding, and is by no means
limited to Secularists. Question for instance one of those
Parsons, who has avowed, in all the state and solenmity of the
Ordination Service, that he " has been truly called according to
" the Will of the Lord Jesus Christ," and there is every likeli-
hood, that he will fritter away his profession into ' a mere form.'
Ask him in the broad daylight of common-sense, '^ Do you
" think God has sent you to your Parish to read sermons as truly
" as He ever sent Moses and Samuel to Israel?" and you will
probably be put off with, " I fear not ; but I hope, I humbly
" trust " and other evasions of that sort. He might be
further asked, " Do you then believe, that since the Bible was
^^ finished, God has fallen into a habit of making indistinct calls
'^ so that His Servants are left in constant doubt as to whether
" they are about His business or not?" but a home-thrust like
this would probably be parried as profane. Bare indeed is any
heart-felt confidence in God. The Divine Onmipresence and
Omnipotence we usually find is no more than a melodious
confession ^from the teeth outwards;' and, than such Melodious
270 THE lord's omnipresence.
Confessors, there are none readier to stigmatize as impious
and fanatical anj Christian who associates Grod with what is
called the vulgar business of life, or the politics of the world.
In our Creeds, in our Prayers, and in our Bibles, there is
no sanction for this gulf between God and Man. The Catechism
puts in every child's mouth these words, ^ To do my duty in
^ that state of life, unto which it shall please Ood to caJl me /'
and surely the Church means, that the child should believe
that Grod has called Mm as pointedly and as actually as He
ever called St. Peter or St. Paul ; for the Church can never
teach, that God does some things more and some things less
effectually, or that He works carefully and carelessly.
Greorge Herbert sings —
* Teach me, my God and King,
* In all things Thee to see ;
* And, what I do in any thing
* To do it as for Thee.
* A servant with this clause
* Makes drudgery Divine :
* Who sweeps a room, as for Thy laws,
^ Makes that, and the action, fine.'
It would far exceed my limits to bring out the full weight
of testimony supplied by the Scriptures and the Church against
our faithless evasions of the Divine Presence in the thoughts
and deeds <of daily life. Let these sayings of the Apostle
John suffice —
* He that doeth Good is of God ; but he that doeth Evil
^ hath not seen God.
* God is Love ; and he that dwelleth in Love dwclleth
^ in God, and God in him.
* If we love one another, God dwelleth in us.' •
How bold are the Scriptures 1 How modem Piety would
• 3 John i. 11. 1 John iv. 16, 12.
HOW SWEDENBORQ IS TO BE VERIFIED. 271
cur8e him as a blasphemer, who accepted in any practical sense
these aphorisms, and in the love of his own heart, and in the
responsive affections of wife, kindred and neighbours should
recognize the very being of the Most High. Yet until John's
words are thus realized we can be little else than Heathens,
worshippings an unknown Deity, a historical, imaginary, or
metaphysical spectre, presiding over a mechanical Universe
wound up at Creation and warranted to run till Doomsday
without meddling.
" You say Swedenborg was sent of God ; How can you
"prove it?'' is a common observation. I should ask the
questioner, " How would you have it proved ? By miracles? "
Surely not, after the experience we have had of miracles as
proofe. Our Lord never adduced miracles as proofs of the
truth of His ministry ; and those who have misused them for
that purpose have always, and happily, signally failed. The
labour of proof has only been doubled by the adroit demand
for proof of the fact of the miracles themselves.
There is, I apprehend, but one way and no other by
which Swedenborg's message can be ratified as Divine.
We know that God appointed bread to be eaten, because it
suits the stomach and nourishes the body. Higher or better
proof than this of Divine appointment we can neither demand
nor imagine. A miracle to attest that bread is sent of God to be
the staff of life, who dreams of?
In the inner region of the JVIind the like is true. By truth
the Mind is fed, as the Body is by bread. * Man doth not live
* by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of
* the mouth of God.' Truth is attested Divine throu^
meeting the appetite of the Mind, and ministering to its
growth, precisely as bread is verified by its adaptation to the
Body. Than such congruity between demand and supply,
between the Mind and the Truth there can be no evidence of
Divine appointment, which is worth repeating. He who seeks
272 THE TRUTH MUST BE ITS OWN EVIDENCE.
for better will never find it, and he who is content with less
will get gorged with wind and poisoned with rubbish •
To this test must Swedenborg^s teachings be brought ; h
priori none can tell whether they are Divine or not. Whether
his bread is good or bad, or innutritions as sand or sawdust,
or somewhat good and somewhat bad, must be decided by
trying. In the matter of Truth, quite as much as that of
Pudding, the proof is in the eating. Any one who reads
Swedenborg and finds his mind nourished and strengthened
by his words may safely shut his ears to the clatter of contro-
versialists, prating concerning a feast of which they know
nothing save the names of the dishes.
" Truth may be its own best evidence," says a reader,
" but Swedenborg, in the passages quoted describing his
^^ Divine Call, does not appear to leave our Minds to the
*' simple force of the Truth inherent in his Message, but
" tries to overawe us and to command our credence by
" asseverations of his Divine Commission ; and I am con-
" cemed, not with your glosses, but to ascertain precisely
" Swedenborg's position and meaning."
«.
* Conceming the value of Evidences a friend of mine relates the following
admirable anecdote —
My father was the pastor of a small Baptist Society in the West of Scotland;
and the author of a treatise on the Evidences of Christianity gave him a copy of
his book for the purpose of obtaining his criticism. One day the author caUed
when my father was out and was received by my mother. Sitting down by
the table, he saw his book, and exclaimed, " Ah I the Evidences. It was to
" hear your husband's opinion of this book that I called to-day. May I ask
"if you have read it, and what you think of it?" "No, sir," said my
mother, " I have not read the book : the gude man has done sae, and he
** seems much ta*en up wi* it; but I've nae favour for works o' that kind."
" Indeed, Ma'am 1 I am sorry to find, that a work designed to prove the
" truth of Christianity should be viewed unfavourably by you." *' It is true,
" Sir, though. Christianity, I aiblins think, does not rest on Evidences of
** your sort; and I think it sheer waste o' time either writing or reading them.
" For, Sir, the Human Family, big though it be, has just two classes ; them
" that hae Christian Grace and them that hinna. The ae class dinifa need
*' Evidences, and the ither winna believe them.
BELIEF CANNOT BE COMPELLED. 273
It is to be admitted at once, that such is the case. Sweden-
borg was in the habit of parading his Divine CaU as if it
were a passport to confidence, instead of suspicion ; and yet
whilst he did so, no man ever more emphatically and profusely
taught the impossibility of creating belief by external authority
or compulsion. He is never tired of telling us that Faith is
the result of the conjunction, in the Intellect, of the Will
with Truth ; and that if the Heart has no affinity for Truth,
whether by reason of Evil, which hates the Light, or from
brutish indifiercnce, Truth in the mouth can be no more than
a parrot-like rattle of words, which are denied and forgotten
as soon as bread and cheese and reputation cease to be the
product of their repetition. Thus he says —
^ It is a Law of the Divine Providence, that a Man should
*not be forced by external means to believe and love the
^ things of Religion.
* No one is really changed by Miracles and Signs
^ It cannot be denied, that Miracles induce belief and strongly
^ persuade, that that is true, which is said and taught by him,
^ who performs Miracles. . . . Faith induced by Miracles is
^ not Faith, but persuasion ; for there is nothing Rational in
^ it, and still less anything Spiritual. . . . By Miracles and
* Signs the Wicked may be driven and forced into Faith, and
' even into worship and piety, but only for a short time ; . . .
^ for their Evils being shut in, struggle and wear away the
^ crust of devotion in which they are enclosed, and at last they
^ break out with renewed strength ; and then the Miracle or
' Sign by which they were persuaded is resolved into a Delusion,
^ or an Artifice, or an unusual Operation of Nature.
* He who is not disposed in his Heart to believe the Truth
* before he comprehends it, will never believe.
' A man only receives so much Truth from others as his
* Will attracts : the overplus passes away.
' All the Wicked inwardly deny the Truth, how much so
' ever they may confess it with their lips.
274 T(OC e&S3H)T WMUMTB. CSIES ¥QC
^ FaaA k an wAmm higcMat tfat m ^iag is »s> fceq— e h
^ k tnK. He wkv » m jeesane F«k thiziis aai speaks to
^di&i ^aO^—'-Tia* h trv. and dtfuriim I IwfieTe itT If
^ be 4je9 wx cMsprelkahd a agrrtnThraft. aubd see it» tmtlif he
^ win «nr — ^ I ^ iM>e kiM>v wfceAei dib » tme or not* time-
^ ^ fefe I do wA irrc beEere H. How can I befiere what I do
^^notciMDfpreikeiid? Pcrliaps h maj be iUse.*^
^ The Angek otterir reject Ae tenets Tbat tlie Under-
^ sCaihdin)^ ouglit to be kept in salgectioD to Faith ; for, they
^ MT, ^ How can too bdiere a dung when too do not see
^ ^ nhetfaer it is tme or not Y'' and shooU anj one affiim,
^ Aat what he adTances dioold neTertheteas be belieTed, they
^ reply, ^ Do yon think yoiDrscIf a god, that I am to befieTc
' ^ yon ? Or that I am mad, that I should belieTe an asser-
' ^ tion in which I do not see any troth? If I most believe,
^ ^ cause me to see it.^^ The dogmatizer is thus constrained
^ to retire. Indeed, the Wisdom of die Angels consists solely
^ in this, that they see and comprehend what they think.'*
It woold be easy to cite pages of similar purport in proof
of his thorough conviction, that Belief is governed by the
Will ; and of his sense of the utter vanity of trying to com-
mand credence by any process wrought on the circumference
of Human Nature. In one place after describing some of
the Mysteries of the Apocalypse he goes on to say —
^ I know that these things will seem to many to exceed
^ their apprehension ; but the reason is, because it is not the
* delight of their Love to know them. If it were the delight
* of their Love, they would not only clearly perceive them, but
^ would also desire to learn more concerning such things ; for
* a Mjm loves what he desires, and what he loves is his delight;
* and whatsoever is loved passes with joy and with light into
* the comprehension of the Mind.' f
• * Divine Frwidence* Nos. 129-133. * Arcana Ccrlestia,' Nob. 1,071, 3.803.
• Heaven and HeiO,* No. 606. * Doctrine of FaUh,' Nos. 2, 4.
t ' Afoealypee Eayiained,* No. 02.
SPECIAL AND GENERAL PROVIDENCE. 275
K therefore Swedenborg was ever tempted^ or if he ever
appears, to use his Divine Call and Spiritual Intercourse as a
means of dominion over the reason of his reader he was acting
at variance with his own principles. In such a case his reader
must deal with him after his own description of the Angelic
method, saying —
" Do you think yourself a god, that I am to believe you?
^^ Or, that I am mad, that I should believe an assertion in
" which I do not see any truth ? If I must believe, cause me
*' to see. How can I believe when I do not know whether
" what you say be true or not?"
The specialty which Swedenborg attributes to his Divine
Call and Mission is a great annoyance to many. Like a
Miracle they cannot get it to lie straight under their doctrine
of * General Laws by which. Sir, this Universe is governed ;'
and they feel, that they must either pronounce him a fanatic,
or, that he will tlirow their intellectual system into chaos.
There is something to be said for and against their perplexity.
The notion of special or exceptional Divine Actions is bom
out of human narrowness and weakness. Finite and imperfect
Man does some things well and many ill ; and on every side
he is girt about with a few possibilities mingled with an infinity
of impossibilities. He lays out his strength here and there
and withdraws it here and there ; of some things he is careful,
of some careless, of some careful at one time and careless at
another. This, our weakness and changefulness, we impute to
Grod, Whom we yet verbally confess Infinite, Almighty, with
no variableness neither shadow of turning.
This Anthropomorphism, this tendency to think of Gh>d as
a Powerful Man, elevated and glorious, but labouring under
some of our own difficulties and limitations is perhaps in-
stinctive, and not entirely avoidable by the best of us. The
Earth cannot but appear to us flat, and the centre of the Solar
System ; but when we reason we correct the inevitable appear-
ance by our better knowledge, and remember, that it is a ball
t2
276 ANTHROPOMORPHISM.
swimming round the aim. The transfer from ourselves to
God of intermittent and irregular energy is nullified by the
study of Natural Science, which brings no fact into more
Tivid prominence than the infinity, the omnipresence, and the
equality of the Divine Skill and Care. Nothing in His
Handiwork is slurred: there is the same perfection in the
wing of a fly as in the eye of a Newton.
A man, wlio is usually styled a Philosopher, fancies he sees
a routine in the Universe, and thereon infers, that its order is
fixed and self-regulative. An anthropomorphic illusion besets
him. Having conceived die idea of a universal Creator and
GJovemor, the Philosopher instinctively tries to imagine how
He manages His Universe ; and thinking how he himself would
deal with vast and intricate affairs, he sympathetically con-
cludes, that Grod conducts His infinite* business on the rough
and by averages. It is true the Preacher speaks of the Divine
Hand as manifest in the least things as in the greatest ; or ratlier,
that to the Infinite there is nothing little and nothing great ;
but out of the pulpit it is quite likely the Preacher himself
would be shocked to hear his words taken seriously, and literally
applied to the current and shabby events of ordinary life. It
so happens that in these days the Pious accept all that the
Philosophic have to say on the method of the Divine Govern-
ment ; with the reservation, that God frequently broke through
His settled governmental routine in the Bible Ages, but rarely
in these centuries, and only on adequate and solemn emergencies,
though never to the extent of a Scriptural Miracle. Habitu-
ally, the Pious assert, we live under an average Providence,
which now and then opens and gives place to a special effort
of the Divine Care ; as for instance, when a sahitly person is
delivered from sudden death by fire, or shipwreck, or from
acme other serious and unusual mischance. Sober Piety
however considers it enthusiastic, if not dangerous, to trust
too fiur, or to speak too much of these special and extraordinary
Iterpositions of the Divine Hand ; and thus Philosophy and
NO TWO THINGS ALIKE IN THE UNIVERSE. 277
Piety conspire to eliminate God from His Universe ; to turn
His Name into a mere inscription, and to place in His Throne
a figment styled General Law,
The notion of ' general self-regulating laws/ under which
the Universe and the Beings therein were created, and by
which they gender and subsist, is a mere scientific hallucina-
tion. If there were any sameness in the Universe, if any two
things or any two events were precisely aUke, we might
suppose that one of them was the result of design, and that
the other was its mechanical or thoughtless repetition, as is a
plaster-cast from a mould. We know, however, that there
are no two things in the Universe perfectly alike ; no two
worlds, no two men, no two events, no two atoms ; in all there
is a dificrcnce wide or narrow, but still a difference. BesideSi
not only are no two things ever alike, but all things are for
ever in a state of mutation or of growth. There is no routine
in the Universe, but change, change everywhere. All is new
under the Sun ; at no instant is Nature the same as at the
previous instant. Tlie truth therefore stands, that for every
existence there must have been a special design and a spedal
creation, and that ovbr it there must be a special and instan-
taneous energy and providence. He who once lays hold on
these great facts will disregard for ever as mere metaphysic
drivel, all talk about a general alternating with a special Provi-
dence. To speak as a finite creature, Gt>d is as much required
in the Universe to-day as at Creation ; and he who does not
perceive this as true, looks at Nature with eyes which might
as well be shut or blind.
But let us hear Swedenborg himself on this matter. He
writes —
^ In Creation nothing lives but God alone ; nothing moves
^ but by life from Him ; nothing exists but by the Sun from
^ Him : thus it is a truth, that in God we live, and move, and are.
^ All things, and each of them, down to the very utter-
^ mosts of Nature, exist and subsist instantly from God. J£
278 PBOVIDENOE UNIYEBSAL BECAUSE PARTICULAR.
the connection of anjihing with Him were broken for a
moment it would instantlj vanish ; for existence is perpetual
subsistence, and preservation perpetual creation.
^ Were not God continuallj present in the Human Mind,
in all its parts and at every moment, it would be dissolved
like a bubble in the air; and both spheres of the Brain,
wherein the Mind exerts its operations, would melt awaj
like froth, and leave the Body a heap of dust, or a volatile
exhalation in the atmosphere.
^ As in the Lord we are and act, EBs Providence is over us
from birth to death, and onwards to eternity. I know from
Heaven, that with every man, in eveiy single instant of his
life, there is a concurrence of more particulars of the Lord's
care than can be comprehended by any arithmetic.
' A King in the world exercises general care over his
Kingdom, and his princes and officers particular care ; but it
is altogether otherwise with Grod. God sees all things, and
knows all things from eternity, and provides all things to
eternity, and Himself keeps all things in order. This can
scarcely be apprehended by any man, and least of all by
those, who trust to their own prudence, who attribute their
successes to their own skill, and their misfortunes to blind
chance and the misdeeds of others ; and in pious and mean-
ingless courtesy attribute to God universal providence.
* The Angels are the Lord's ministers, and they unani-
mously confess, that all their work is done by the inspiration
of will, and wisdom, and strength from Him.
* To talk of the Lord's Providence as universal and to
separate it from particulars is like talking of a whole in
which tlicrc are no parts, or of something in which there is
nothing. Consequently it is most false, a mere fiction of the
imagination, and downright stupidity to say, that the Lord's
Pn)videncc is universal and not at the same time in the
minutest particulars : for to provide and rule in the universal
and sot at the same time in the minutest particulars is not to
SWEDENBORG A SPECIAL WORK OF QOD. 279
^ rale at all. This is philosophicallj true, jet, strange to saj,
^ philosophers, and even the more sublime of them, conceive
* and think otherwise.
^ Supposing moreover that it was evinced by a thousand and
^ a thousand argmnents to a believer in Prudence that the Divine
^ Providence is universal because it extends to the most minute
^ particulars, and that not a hair falls from the head which is
^ not foreseen and provided for, his opinion of the range of his
^ own prudence would remain unaffected except for the moment;
* yea if even the truth were demonstrated to him by some start-
^ ling fact within his own experience, he would revert to his
^ old notion after a few hours ; for unless the Will be changed
* the Understanding cannot be permanently influenced. '•
Thus very plainly do we see, that Swedenborg allowed no
gradations in the Divine Providence,
If I say Swedenborg was an extraordinary man, no one
objects ; if I say a special and wonderful work was done in
his creation, I instantly give wide offence ; yet there is really
no difference whatever between the statements. Swedenborg
was an extraordinary man ; God made him ; therefore an
extraordinary or special work was done in his creation. Who
can question the assertion ?
The same might be said of Plato, or Paul, or ShaksperOi
or of any man ; for in the meanest there is a difference, and
that difference is a specialty — a faculty for some piece of
work in which its owner can have no competitor. God is the
Love, the Wisdom, and the Strength alike of the least as of
the greatest ; for as Swedenborg says —
^ Ood is ever and everywhere the Same.
' It appears as if the Divine [i.e., Godf] were not the same in
• * Arcana CixUBiia,' Nos. 1,919, 2,694, 6,122, 5,894, 4,523, 6,482, 7,007,
8,717, 10,774. 'Divine Lave and Wiidam,' No. 801. * True ChruHan
Rdujion,' Nos. 30 and 224.
t * It i8 said, that the Divine filb all spaces of the UniYerso and not
2g*> <4;i> 3( ayii2FVHMB& rsx.
^ «Be Xaa a» in jntidus-: :&ac St ^^^ » fiiSawac at the Wne
^ lEaa snii 5a. t&e ^Simpie.. bi :fai» *.*{ii 3CaiL imi tte lafiyn : bat
* t&&$ s & jiILu:^ ^m jDOt*anzii%. ILul is ^ffifrrcnc. bet tibe
^ DtrEne V. ^f^ ^Iritr 3i hioL » ouc .mfiezcnc. ILm » a rraptent,
^aiid^arecmufirrsTaraiiiBw A Ww ILul 3» in»jne aiiei^ttiSielj*
^ mml dier^c« zxb:F*f ciQt. & cifcipoeiEt vii me £*mae Ij(>Tr and
* Wnlmii t&sL & SanpLe )Lbi : aini sa *.id ILu vbo » wise^
^ tbaii an Induct ami a B*^^. X^wr^fes^ die Drnne b the
^ wimr in the ^nae as ol che other, in Eke mamKr h » a uBaer
^finMn apfwaruKe. dias the Krbie 3» rarw^ in Ang^ and
^ lien, because Ai^eb are in vutkon izxSMe. and Men not
^ aOL The rarietr » in die DKerrers^ and not zn the Lord.
^ The Lofd B not in a greater decree ol" lore and wisdom
^ with one than with another, bat » everrwheie the same :
^ but He is not receir^ bj one in the same degree as by
^ another, and hence His c&Terse appearance.**
Swedenborg therefoie adrances no daim of nearness to
Grod, which he does not concede to erenr creature ; the sole
difference between himself and other? lav in his open and
{NOUS recognition of that uniTersal Divine relationship to
which the majority of mankind, drunken with the ^ lust of the
^ flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life/ are
insensible. There is no reason why any one of us in the
righteous fulfilmeut of our duties might not say — I do this or
that under Divine direction ; or, advised by conscience, say —
Grod has told me so and so ; or, in a piece of well-considered
and unsclfisli advice, commend it to the hearer as — God's
' God ; for if it were Raid, that God-Man fills them, natural Reason would
' not as8cnt ; but when it is said, that the Di^-ine fills them, this is assented
' to, beciiuso it agrees with the form of speech of theologians, that God is
• omnipresent, and hears and knows all things.'—' Divine Love and IVtsdomf*
No. 72.
Swedeuborg has gained nothing by such concessions to popular phrase-
ology, but has thereby given occasion for frequent and serious misapprehension
of his meaning.
• * IHvi»§ lAfH and Wisdom,' Nos. 78, 124.
QOD IS NOW AS OF OLD. 281
message to you bj me. In this way says Swedenborg the
men of the Ancient Church spoke : —
' In the Ancient Church when any one was advertised, or
*had it suggested to him by conscience, or by any inward
* dictate, or by their word, that a thing was so, the form of
' speech employed was — " Jehovah said.'' '•
Thus, aided by himself, do we interpret Swedenborg's
assertion of his Divine Mission. Glad we are to have his
accordant testimony ; for persistent and inflexible must ever be
our resistance to any pretence of private and exclusive Divine
intercourse. Equally near and dear to our Father are all His
children. ^ He makcth His sun to rise on the evil and on
^ the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.'
Not one can shew a favour from Him, which another may not
have if he will only receive. To no renowned Prophet or
Apostle has the Lord been more than He is willing to be to
any of us at this very hour. He has said, ^^ Behold I stand at
^^ the door, and knock : if any man hear my voice and open
^^ the door, I will come into him, and will sup with him, and he
" with me." It is vain to try to fntter away this promise. It
stands for ever as the sure warrant to every Christian, that he
may enjoy his Lord's presence as veritably and as utterly as
ever did Priest or Saint from Adam in Eden to John in Patmos.
Swedenborg's frequent assertion, that the Lord had mani-
fested Himself before him in Person, is often adduced as the
final touch of his fanaticism ; but when we ascertain the
terms of his meanmg, much of its strangeness disappears.
The declaration of John, that ^ No man hath seen God at
^ any time,' and of Jehovah to Moses, ^ Thou canst not see my
^ face : for there shall no man see me and live,'t Swedenborg
loyally accepts and abundantly confirms. He says —
^ No one can see the Lord as He is in Himself. It would
• * Arcana Ccdutia,' No. 1410. f 1 John iv., 12. EzoduB xxziii., 80.
282 THE INFINITE IS UNAPPROACHABLE.
be as if he should enter the sun by the fibre whereof he would
be consumed in a moment.
^ The Divine is incomprehensible even bj the Angels, for
there is no ratio between the Finite and the Infibiite.
^ No man or Angel can ever approach the Father, and
immediately worship Him, for He is invisible, and being
invisible can neither be thought of nor loved.
^ God is Infinite, and the Human Mind cannot discover
what is the quality of the Infinite. We can only define it
as the Infinite All, and that it subsists in itself, and is thereby
the very and the one only Substance ; and since nothing is
predicable of a substance, unless it be a form, that the
Infinite is also the very and the one only Form. Notwith-
standing these conclusions, the true quality of the Infinite
does not appear; for the Human Mind, however highly
analytical and fitted for sublime speculations is still Finite, and
cannot overcome the limit of its being. We can never
therefore comprehend the Infini^ of Grod, or see Him as He
is in Himself.
^ It is vain then to desire to know God in His Esse or in
His Substance. It is enough to acknowledge Him from
things Fmite, that is, from things created, in which He
infinitely is. The man who seeks to know more of G^d
than this, may be compared to a fish out of water, or a bird
gasping for breath under the receiver of an air-pump.'*
These passages should satisfy even Metaphysicians. Now
comes the question, K none can see G^d, how then does
Swedenborg explun His manifestation to himself? Thus —
^ Though G^d, inasmuch as He is Infinite, transcends finite
apprehension. He conjoins Himself with Humanity through
finite appearances. By the Angels He is seen as the Sun of
Heaven, the source of all their heat and light. Ever
* * Arcana Ccekftia^' No. 2,531. * Apocalypse Explained^* Nos. 114 and
1^1. 'Athanaaian Creed,' No. 24, and ' True Christian Rdigion; No. 28.
NONE CAN SEE JEHOVAH. 283
^apparent to their eyes as a Sun, yet when they think
^ interiorly, they do not think of God otherwise than in
^themselves. Let not any one cherish the error, that the
^ Lord is in Heaven among the Angels as a king is in his
^ kingdom. To appearance He is in the Sun above them, but
* as to reality He is in them.'*
Another appearance the Lord in Heaven assumes ; thus —
^ The Lord sometimes presents Himself to the sight of
^ the Angels out of the Sun. In such a case he veils Himself
^ by means of an Angel ; He possesses the Angel, lays asleep
^ the AngeFs selfhood, and inspires him so perfectly with His
^ Spirit, that the Angel knows no other than that he is the
^ Lord, and he speaks and is listened to by other Angels accord-
^ ingly. When the Angel has fulfilled his mission he returns
^ to his ordinary state, and speaks and acts from himself. 'f
Whilst the Scriptures affirm, that no man has seen or can
see Jehovah, they contain at the same time numerous relations
of His appearance to Patriarchs and Prophets. By the Divine
possession of an Angel, Swedenborg explains all these appear-
ances, and reconciles statements apparently contradictory. He
writes —
^ The Lord appeared as a Man and talked face to face
^ with the members of the Most Ancient Church (the Adamic).
^ Li like manner he was seen by Abraham, Hagar, Lot,
^ Gideon, Joshua, the Prophets, and others. They saw not
' Jehovah, but Angels, who were filled with His presence,
^who spoke from His inspiration, and who therefore called
^ themselves Jehovah.' |
• *Athana8ian Creed,' No. 27. * Arcana CoeUitia,* Nob. 7,270, 8,760.
' Apocalypse Revealed,' No. 54. ' Divine Love and fTwdbm,' No. 130, and
^Divine Providence,'' No. 31.
t 'Arcana Ccdegtia,' Nos. 1,745, 1,925. ^Apooalifpee Revealed; No. 988.
• True Christian Religion,^ No. 691, * Divine Providence,* No. 96, and * Heaven
• and ITeU,' Nob. 52 and 55.
i 'Arcana Codestia,' Nos. 49, 125, 1,341, 1,578, 1,894. ' Apocahffpee
• liivcfiiiul,' No. 938, and * Divine Providence,* No. 96.
284 HOW QOD MAT BE SEEN.
Swedenborg places his own experience on the same ground
as the Angels and the Prophets, saying —
* Several years ago (writing in 1764) the Lord was re-
^ vealed to me, and since He has continually appeared before
^my (inner) eyes as the Smi, in which He is, even as He
* appears to the Angels.
^ They were Angels who appeared to the Prophets, and
^ spoke in the name of the Lord. This, it has been given to
^ me to know by much experience of a similar kind, at this
^ day, in the other life.
* Those who saw Jehovah as recorded in the Word were
* girt about and protected from the overpowering glory of the
* Divine Presence by a column of Spirits. In the same way
* the Lord has oftentimes been seen by me.'*
Li like manner we shall all see the Lord, if at death we
fibd ourselves among the Angels ; and so we should see Him
even now were our inner eyes opened as were Swedenborg's.
Here also on Earth Swedenborg teaches us to see and hear
the Lord, saying —
^ Man has always the Lord before his eyes if he be loving
^and wise.
* The Lord speaks with every Man ; for whatever he wills
^ that is good, or thinks that is true, is firom the Lord. There
* are with every Man, at least two Evil Spirits exciting his
^ evils, and two Angels inspiring him with goodness and truth.
* The angelic ministry is wholly the Lord's. Thus the Lord
' continually speaks with Man, although quite diversely with
^ different Men. To such as suffer themselves to be led by
* Evil Spirits, the Lord speaks as though He were absent, or
^ at a distance, so that He can be scarcely said to speak ; but
' to such as are led by Him, He addresses Himself more nearly,
^ as must be sufficiently evident on reflecting, that no one
* 'Divine Providence,' No. 135, 'Divine Love and Wittdam,' No. 131,
' Arcana Coclesiia^' No. 1,925, aiid 'Apocalypte Explained,' No. 78.
THE DIVINE MANIFESTATION. 285
*' can possibly think anything good and true, except from the
*Lord.
^ The presence of the Lord with Man takes place when he
^ loves his neighbour ; for the Lord is Love, and in so far as
^ a Man loves, the Lord is present with him ; and in the degree
^ in which the Lord is present He speaks with Man, and the
* Man partakes of the Lord's life.'*
So likewise even here, we may at times have seen the Lord
possess a good man, as Swedenborg tells us he has seen Him
possess an Angel. In some sacred and awAil hour when ^ filled
with the Holy Ghost,' his face has become as Stephen's, as
though ^ it had been the face of an Angel ; ' we observe a light
in his eyes hitherto unseen, a sound in his voice hitherto
unheard, a passion and an unction in his eloquence heretofore
unknown. When the afflatus has departed he feels that he
has been other than himself, that a glory not his own has been
round his brows, and that words such as he never conceived
have been gliding over his lips. After such an experiencci
reverently, may we not say ? — We have seen and heard the
Lord in His servant.
Lastly we come to Swedenborg's statement, that through
his writings the Lord Jesus Christ had made His second advent
for the institution of the New Church signified by the New
Jerusalem in the Revelation : of it, we shall be much better
qualified to speak at the end of this book when we shall have
reviewed those works concerning which he advances this
momentous claim. It will be remembered that Brockmer
reported, that Swedenborg had said to him, *that he was
' Messiah, and that he was come to be crucified for the Jews,*
and, that when he afterwards met him, ^ he would never leave
^ the tenet, that he was Messiah.' No assertion that he was
• ' Divine Love and Wisdom,' No. 137. * Arcana CasUttia,' Nos. 904
and 2,263.
286 THB LORD IS ALWAYS COMING.
Messiah can we find in any of his writings ; it may be that he
left off the use of that title when he emerged from the
phantastic state described in the Diary of Dreams^ although
his statement, ^ that, since the Lord cannot manifest Himself
* in person, it follows, that He will effect His promise by the
< instrumentality of a Man,' may fairly be held as its equivalent,
when we consider, that Swedenborg maintained that he was
that instrument.
For ourselves we are very tolerant of such pretensions,
with the proviso, that they are in no sense final or exclusive.
Dr. Channing in an oration delivered about 1842, accurately
eiq[>resse8 what we would say at this time on the present
subject —
« There are some among us who are lookmg for the speedy
coming of Christ. They expect before another year closes
to see Him in the clouds, to hear His voice, to stand before
His judgement^at. These iUusions spring from miamter-
pretation of Scripture language. Christ in the New Testa-
ment is said to come whenever His religion breaks out in
new glory, or gains new triumphs. He came in the Holy
Spirit on the Day of Pentecost. He came in the destruction
of Jerusalem, which by subverting the old ritual law and
breaking the power of the worst enemies of His religion,
ensured to Him new victories. He came in the Reformation
and in Protestantism. He came on this day four years ago,
when through Hb religion 800,000 men were raised fi*om
the lowest degradation to the rights, and dignity, and
fellowship of men. Christ's outward appearance is of little
moment compared with the brighter manifestation of His
Spirit. The Christian, whose inward eyes and ears are
touched by God, discerns the coming of Christ, hears the
soimd of His chariot wheels and the voice of His trumpet
when no other perceives them. He discerns the Saviour's
advent in the dawning of higher truth in the world, in new
aspirations of the Church after perfection, in the prostration
CHBIST'S iJ)yEKT PERPETUAL. 287
^ of prejudice and error, in brighter expressions of Christian
^ love, in more enlightened and intense consecration of the
^ Christian to the cause of humanity, freedom and religion.
^ Christ comes in the conversion, the regeneration, the eman-
* cipation of the world.'*
This dissertation may have exceeded due bounds and
the reader's patience, but I think it will simplify and quicken
the ensuing narrative by enabling us to dispense with many
explanations. Henceforth, without apology, we shaU write of
Swedenborg's intercourse with the Spiritual World just as
though we were speaking of his travels in Italy, France, or
Grermany.
* An Address delivered at Lenox, Massachasetts, on the Ist of August,
1842 ; the ahniyersary of Negro Emancipation in the British West Indies.
( 28S )
CHAPTER III.
THE SPIRITUAL DIARY.
There are no signs in Swedenborg^s ^Adversarial of the
continuance of the incoherent moods displayed in his ' Diary
* of Dreams.'^ In one place he writes very affectingly of his
temptations —
^ The Children of Israel underwent temptations, but they
^ all jrielded. It is God Messiah, Who alone sustains Man and
^ conquers for him in temptation, as I have manifestly ex-
^perienced I was clearly permitted to see that of
^ myself I should yield, and that no Man can withstand the
^ least temptation except by God Messiah^s aid
* Concerning the attempts of the Devil or Evil Spirits.
^ I can attest that they are so dreadful and horrible as to
be indescribable. The Devil^s most deceitful machinations
are unutterable, yea inconceivable ; for there is nothing bad
in Man, which he does not stir up to work mischief. Where-
fore unless Man were mercifully protected by the Lord every
moment of his life, he would plunge headlong into damnation.
These direful attempts of EvU Spirits, which I have oflen
experienced, are rather to be consigned to oblivion than
published. By them I have learnt, that unless the Lord had
been essentially present, I could not have held out a single
moment, but must inevitably have gone to perdition.'*
* • Advertfiria,' No8. 7,608-0 and 7,529.
CHRISTIAN VI. OF DENMARK. 289
In the Autumn of 1747, Swedenborg sailed firom Gotten-
burg for London. In the course of the voyage his sliip
stopped at Oresound, and the Swedish Consul there, M.
Kryger, asked him to dinner, along with some of the chief
people of the to\^Ti. When all were seated at table the Consul
broke silence by asking Swedenborg whether he had seen
Christian VI., of Denmark, who had died last year, 1746. He
answered, that he had, and that when he saw him for the first
time, he was accompanied by a certain bishop, who humbly
begged his pardon for the many errors into which he had led
him by his counsels. A son of the Bishop's was at the table,
and the Consul fearing that something yet more awkward might
be said, interrupted him saying, " Sir, this gentleman is the
" Bishop's son." " It may be," replied Swedenborg, " but
" what I have told you, is true."*
In London he commenced a ' Spiritual Diary ^^ which, with
more or less assiduity, he kept for seventeen years ; its final
date is 3rd December, 1764. Into this spiritual day-book
written in large oblong folios such as are used in counting-
houses, he entered what thoughts and what visions he cared to
preserve, numbering, and sometimes dating, the paragraphs.
Passages he occasionally transferred to his published works,
and these he drew his pen across, just as some shopkeepers do
the entries in their journals as they post them into the ledger, f
Diaries are not books to be read through: they are in
their nature fragmentary ; and the mind requires continuity of
event or argument in order to be continuously interested. It
is pleasant to open and dip into ' Pept/s^s Diary ^ but to com-
* Related by General Tuxen, Danish Commivioner of War at Elsinore.
We owe ficvcral anecdotes of Swedenborg to Tuzen, and shall encounter him
in our narrative in due course.
t Dr. Tafel, of Tilbingen, edited and printed the 'Diarium SpirUuale '
from Swedenborg'H manuscripts, in twelve volumes, some thick and some
thin, between 1844 and 1859. A list of the volumes will be found in the
Appendix.
U
290 SPIRITUAL DIARY.
mence at the beginmng of one of the volumes and read to the
end would be as wearisome as the other mode is agreeable.
The same is true of the ^82)iritual Diary ^^ but with additional
force from the fact, that the pieces in it possessing anj living
interest arc commonly sundered by wide tracts of wordy barren-
ness, which it is hardly possible for even tlie dullest reader to
drudge through sentence after sentence without skipping. The
*2>tary,' moreover, is a gloomy register ; its themes are mainly
unhappy, being descriptive of interviews with wretched souls,
afflicted with monstrous delusions and terrible sufferings. On its
pages we shall make frequent drafts, and our present chapter
we shall complete with a variety of extracts pertaining to the
period we have now reached — London, 1747-49. We may
premise, that the references of the '-Diary' to the Outer World
are few and far between. The persons and scenery to which it
relates belong almost entirely to the World of Spirits, ' a
* place or state between Heaven and Hell, into which Man
* enters immediately afler death ; and after a certain time, the
* duration of which is determined by the quality of his life on
^ Earth, he is either elevated into Heaven or cast into Hell.'
How Spirits tormented our Author.
^ISept. 1747. — From experience I have learnt, that Evil
Spirits cannot desist from tormenting. By their presence
they have inflicted pains upon different parts of my body ;
as upon my feet, so that I could scarcely walk ; upon the
dorsal nerves, so that I could scarcely stand ; and upon parts
of my head with such pertinacity, that the pains lasted for
some hours. I was clearly instructed, that such sufferings
are inflicted upon Man by Evil Spirits.'
The Punishment of a Witdi.
* 3 Nov. 1747. — It seemed to me in a sleep, that a Witch
' had used her craft to take away true love, and thus to render
* a man weak. When I awoke she appeared, and was recog-
SPIRITUAL DIARY. 291
' nized as a Witch, and was delivered ovor to a punisliment,
' frightftil beyond my conception. I was told, that her punish-
* nient was the result of an inquest of Angels into her atrocities.
*" She appeared to dissolve into hideous snakes and serpents,
* which glided away from the presence of the Spirits.'
Worldly Cares shut up Heaven.
' 5 Dec, 1747. — Wlien I have been walking about in the
Heavens, and allowed my thoughts to lapse into worldly
anxiety Heaven instantly disappeared.
* 4 Marcli^ 1748. — I have now been nearly three years, or
thirty-three months witli my mind withdrawn from corporeal
things, and in society with spiritual and celestial Spirits as a
man with men, at which the Spirits wonder. When, how-
ever, I am intensely absorbed in worldly things — as when,
concerned about necessary expenses, I to-day wrote a letter,
the Spirits could not speak with me ; they were as if absent
from me. This has liappened before. Hence I know, that
Spirits cannot converse with a Man who is much devoted to
worldly and corporeal cares. Such cares draw the Mind down
and immerse it in Nature.
' 21 Oct. 1748. — As often as I have thought of my garden,
of him who had care of it, of my being called home, of money
matters, of the state of mind of my friends, of the character
of those in my house, of the things I am to write, and espe-
cially how my work will bo received by the worid, and the
probability that it will not bo understood, of new clothes to
be purchased, and various matters of a similar kind, and I
have been held in these cares for some time, Evil Spirits
throw in troublesome, inconvenient and unhappy suggestions,
and aggravate and confirm my anxiety.
' Hence arises the melancholy of many people ; debilitated
minds, deliriums, insanities, phantasies.
' Therefore the I^ord, to save us from useless cares and
insanity commands, that we take no cAre for the morrow.'
U2
292 8PUUTUAL DIABT.
Muen and Mice.
* 24 />«?., 1747. — Those, who love money as an end, dwell
^ in celli9 and hide their treasure therein. These cells are in-
^ fested with large mice, big as mountain rats, which tease them
* nntil they are cured of their lust/
Book Worms,
^ Some love reading and cram their memories for the sake
* of a learned reputation. When they become Spirits they
' dwell in subterranean places, where they study by the light
' of candles, which are frequently snuffed out. They are also
' infested with mice and other vermin until they desist from
* their folly.'
Beggars after Death.
* 30 Dec. VI AT. — They who have been long accustomed to
begging, and at length have acquired pleasure therein, so as
to contract dislike to a life of useful labour, appear naked, or
only covered with filthy rags, so botched together as scarcely
to hide their skin. They beg alms of everybody they meet,
employing one with a small dish to receive it. I heard from
them, that it is true what is said of beggars, that they desire
nothing but money, despising garments and food ; that they
live impiously among themselves — in quarrels, abhorring
work, and sometimes surfeiting in every luxury. They have
a kind of government among themselves, which they desire
to bo kept secret.'
Directed hy an Angel,
' 5 Jan. J 1748. — I have experienced when writing to-day,
* tluit an Angel directed those things which I wrote ; and
' iimIimmI in such a way, that I could thence perceive, that
' tliere ih not even the sliglitest thing, which is not under tlie
' HUHpiccH of Ood Messiah.'
SPIRITUAL DIARY.
293
A Conspiracy to suffocate our Author.
' 8 Jan. J 1748. — When I was about to go to sleep, it was
stated, that certain Spirits were conspiring to kill me ; but
because I was secure, I feared nothing and fell asleep. About
the middle of the night I awoke, and felt that I did not
breathe from myself, but, as I believed, from Heaven. It
was then plainly told me, that whole hosts of Spirits had
conspired to suffocate me, and as soon as they made the
attempt, a heavenly respiration was opened in me and they
were defeated.'
Tempted to Steal.
' 11 Jan.j 1748. — I observed that certain Spirits often
wished to excite me to steal things of small value, such as
are met with in shops ; and so great was their desire, that
tliey actually moved my hand.
' 6 Feb. — I ascertained that in the world these Spirits had
been tradespeople, who by various artifices defrauded their
customers, and thought it allowable. Some had been cele-
brated merchants, at which I wondered. They wander
about searching for things to steal, and wherever detected
are punished with stripes and blows.
^ When they were with me, as soon as I saw any thing in
shops, or any pieces of money, or the like, their cupidi^
became manifest to me ; for thinking themselves to be me,
they urged, that I should stretch forth my hand to steal,
quite contrary to my usual state and custom.'
How Spirits mujfht possess Man.
* 26 Jan. J 1748. — Spirits, if permitted, could possess those
*' who speak with them so utterly, that they would be as though
^ they were entirely in the world ; and indeed in a manner so
^ manifest, that they could communicate their thoughts by
* words through their medium, and even by letters ; for they
' have sometimes, and indeed often, directed my hand when
294 SPIRITUAL DIARY.
' writing, as though it were quite their own ; so that they
* thought it was not I, but themselves who were writing.'
The Punishment of Luxuriotts Women — of ParvenvLS.
' 28 Jan.^ 1748. — The punishment is dreadful of women
who have become rich, and have suffered themselves to be
served as queens by a retinue of servants ; who have had no
concern to be of any use, but only to gratify their love of
luxury and ease, lolling on sofas, decking themselves out
with dress and jewels, and presiding at entertainments.
When they enter the other life they associate with their
like, and for a while, things go on as in the world ; but they
soon begin to strike and scratch and drag each other about
by the hair of the head in a maimer so frightful, that one
cannot endure the sight. They are also hung up like
stripped carcases of swine with their feet cut off, and their
bodies lacerated in a thousand places one after another, —
yea, the blood flows in such profusion, that I was filled with
horror, and the Spirits around me, being terrified, wanted to
flee away. Nevertheless such is their fate.
' After I had seen the cruel punishment such women
undergo, I was twice instructed, that they were not bom
to wealth, as is the case with queens, who know and are
accustomed to nothing else; but that by success they had
risen from poverty to riches, and had abandoned themselves
to voluptuous pleasures.'
Worthless Metaphysics,
^ 30 Jan,^ 1748. — To-day, when coming home, I was sad.
' I knew my sadness arose from a troubled Spirit, who told
* me, tliiit in his lifetime he had reckoned himself as amongst
' the most famous of men, and had devoted himself to meta-
' physical stuclies. Discovering how worthless were Meta-
' physics, how they were mere phantasies, which had hid from
8P1IUTUAL DIAKY. 295
' his eyes the light of divine and spiritual truth, he called
* them filtli, and was full of sorrow.
^ This Spirit is now with me, sees me writing, and directs me-
' 18 Feh.^ 1748. — Philosophical studies for some thousands
*' of years have consisted solely in terms and syllogisms, dis-
^ cussions as to what are Accidents, what is Form, what are
' Modes, and the like. These disputes, as they consist only in
' words, ruin the Mind : those who indulge in them are like
' men who learn a language, not for the sake of expressing
' ideas, but only for talking. Such studies, as they concentrate
' the intellect on things without life, thoroughly darken and
' stupify those who are given up to tliem, so that in true
' intelligence they are far beneath rustics and the lowest of
' the common people.'
Very frequent in the ' Diary'' are similar remarks on the
Metaphysics. Swedcnborg knew of what he spoke, for. Had
he not been delivered from Wolf and his dreary crew? In
his ^Adversaria on Isaiah^ occurs this pithy summary of his
opinion —
' The more any one is imbued with Philosophy, the greater
^ his blindness and darkness ; the blindness increases with the
' quantity of the Philosophy, as might be proved by many
' examples.'
Friends and Acquaintance.
' 1 Feb.^ 1748. — I have seen many of my friends and
^ acquaintimcc in the other life. Some are with me almost
' continuallv. (^e friend was vrith me for more than a month.
' All wonder that the world does not know that men live
' immediately after death, and that there is so little difference
^ between the life of the Spirit and the life of the Body, that
' they can hardly realize that a change has been made.
' 14 March, — I have conversed with about thirty people
' intuuately known to me during their life on earth, and with
' about tliirty mentioned in the Word of the Lord.
•
296 BPIKITUAL DIAKT.
* 18 March. — I have computed the number of those known
* to me in the life of the body, vrith whom .1 have conversed.
^ They exceed thirty, at least ; for I could not remember all.
* With some I have conversed for days, with others for weeks,
' and with two for about two months. I talked with them
* concerning their family affairs, and very many other subjects,
^ just as one man does with another, and also about transac-
* tions since their death, and upon a variety of other topics.'
' 24 Sept. — I can now augment the number to sixty.'
Spirits change Flavours^ or Affect the Taste.
^ Feb.^ 1748. — It has sometimes, yea rather often hap-
^ pened, that what has tasted well has been changed in my
' mouth to what is nasty, or to another taste. Twice, if I
^ mistake not, sugar tasted almost like salt. A liquor I drank
^ had infused into it a salty taste expressed by tlie Spirits from
* the juices of the body The taste of Man is thus
* changed according to the phantasies of Spirits.
' 3 and 4 March. — Spiritual Angels dislike butter, which
* was made clear to me from this circumstance-^that although
* I am fond of butter, I did not for a long while, even for
* some months desire any, during which time I was in associa-
* tion with them ; and when I tasted butter, I found it had lost
* the pleasant flavour it once had to me.
* That the Spiritual Angels caused this aversion was plain,
* from the fact, that when a Celestial* Angel was with me,
* and I was impelled to eat some good butter, the Spiritual
* Angels caused an odour of butter to rise from my mouth to
' my nostrils, by way of reproach.
' Still however they are much delighted with milk, and
*' when I partook of some, the relish was more grateful than I
* Swedenborg divides all Angds into two orders — Celestial and Spiritual ;
the Celestial Angels are the Angels of Love, or of the Will : the Spiritual
^gels ai« the Angels of Troth, or of the Intellect.
SPIRITUAL DIAUY. 297
*• can describe. Milk belongs to the Spiritual as butter does to
' the Celestial Angels ; — not that they delight therein as food,
' but on account of their correspondence.'
This, and much else of similar import in the ' Diary y may
to some appear ineffably absurd. Let me assure such, that
their contempt is merely a sign of their ignorance — something
like the guffaw of a boor who sees a naturalist dredging a
duck-pond for specimens. One of the first postulates of
8wedenborg's spiritual system is the connection of Spirit with
Matter. He holds that the World of Spirit is the Soul of the
World of Matter ; that there is nothing seen which has not
its life and cause in the unseen — butter and milk included ; in
a word, that there is nothing in Nature, which has not its
analogue in the universal Human Mind. The individual
Mind, he goes on to teach, finds its comfort and satisfaction
in being surrounded with such visible things as are in corres-
pondence or harmony with its special and peculiar character.
Thus a good man finds his home in the order and beauty of
Heaven, and a bad man in the disorder anH ugliness of HelL
Thus the Spirits who were vnth Swedenborg desired to assi-
milate everything about him, all that he did and ate and
drank into correspondence vrith their own likings. Hence the
difference over the butter and the milk. The mystery of our
own varying likes and dislikes to men and things is accounted
for in the same way — by our varying associations with good
and evil Spirits of different genius. Perhaps this explanation
may not be intelligible, but ere we end this work we shall have
many occasions to illustrate this doctrine of the affinity between
the inner things of the Mind and the outer things of the Body
and the World. Until the doctrine is understood nothing can
be rightly known of Swedenborg's later teaching.
We have here another instance of the same order —
White Vestments.
' 14 Marchj 1748. — There are amongst Spirits many who
298 SPUUTUAL DIAMJ.
^ loTe white Testmenta, and^ indeed 00 paasioiiatelj, tliat thev
' inched me during serenJ weeks to bay sodi Testments/
What comes over tie DectTg hack ig twrt to go under
At9 ieUy.
^ 7 Marchj 1748. — ^Erident as it is from common ex-
^pttrience, so mnch so^ that it has paand into a proverb,
* ^ Mfde paria ad iertmm iaredem mm vewiemij* nevertheless
^ many are so £uthless and so bfind as to have no care as to the
^ means wherebv they get monej. It has however been to-day
^ confirmed to me by Angdsy that riches^ wrcmgly acquired,
^pass away, take nnto themselves wings and vanish, the
^ holders scarce know how/
The I\miskmeni of CircMmroiation,
^ 18 JUorci, 1748. — Some Spirits are punished by being
^ whirled round like a wheel, for a long time and very swiftly,
^ after which they appear like garments wiA no body in them.
^ Such is the poniahment of those who do not speak as
^ they think, but devise artftil qpecches in which the words are
^ literally tme, but are intended to deceive. When these at
^ death come into the Worid of ^irits and discover, that all
^ there must speak as they feel, and that every one has a quick
^perceptionof what is in his neighbours innermost mmd,they
^ endeavour to excuse the habit of ^am life, and to keep in
^ good society^ by saying, that their sentences are verbally
^ true. Thus they hope to continue the artifices they delighted
^ in, and fancy their cunning may remain hid. In this they
^ are woefully disappointed. They are whirled about as
^ described, and appear as mere bodiless raiment waving in
* tlio wiml,*
« Tho Sootti»h pi\>v«H>, * Ill-won gear winnA enrich the third heir, '
44UMWt>rM to i\w l^tiu. *■ Ill-gotten goods seldom prosper/ and ' Evil-gotten,
* ^yi\ ii|Kml»' r«pe»t the tmth.
8PIBITUAL DIARY. 299
It is sometimes a puzzle to the honest, why the wicked
should be pious ; that brigands should be sedulous in their
devotions, that fraudulent bankers should be faithful to Exeter
Hall, and that unquestionable sanctimony should characterize
creatures otherwise lascivious, deceitful and venomous. It is
often hastily concluded that such piety is insincere, but there
is no fair reason to think so. Phrenology clearly shews, that
the faculty of veneration may co-exist with the most depraved
moral organization. The following is an illustration firom
Swedcnborg's experience —
The Revengeful can Pray devoutly.
' 18 March^ 1748. — Whilst praying certain Spirits are some-
' times allowed to pray with me. Whilst thus engaged, I have
' seen Spirits, who burned for revenge, praying with eamest-
' ness and devotion, as if from good faith ; nor could I perceive
' that there was anything of simuhition therein, at which I
' wondered.'
Kings and Magnates treated as Common People.
' 18 March^ 1748. — When Souls come into the Heaven of
^ Spirits there is no distinction made as to Kings and Mag-
^ nates ; there is no respect of persons. I have known some
' great people, with whom I have had some talk, treated by
^ Spirits as though they had been of the lowest class ; so that
' at length they confessed, that to have been powerful, noble
' and learned on Earth profited nothing in the Spirit World.'
About the time this was written, there was a lady of rank,
who, hearing of Methodism, and affecting the fashionable un-
belief of the time, said, that Christianity was manifestly a
delusion, inasmuch as it prescribed one mode of salvation for
gentle and for vulgar blood. It might have done her good
had she known the way to Swedenborg's lodgings, and heard
hun repeat some of the experiences of which the above is a
trifling fraction.
300 SPIRITUAL DIARY.
Spirits claiming our Author^s Work.
* 19 March^ 1748. — When I had been writing certain
* things, a Spirit who was near me, on the left, thanked me
* when I had finished for having assisted him. I was aware
* he thought himself to be myself, as is usually the case. He
* departed and told others, what he had written, but said he
^ was not sure whether he ought to consider, that he had
^ copied it by means of his own hand Such are the
' co-operations of Spirits with Man.' '
Spirits relate things wholly false^ and lie.
' 20 ifarcA, 1748. — When [deceitful] Spirits begin to speak
*with Man, care should be taken not to believe them, for
' ahnost everything they say is made up by them, and they he.
* If it were permitted them to relate what Heaven is, and how
^ things are in Heaven, they would tell so many falsehoods,
' and with such strong assertion, that Man would be astonished.
* Wherefore I was not allowed, when such Spirits were speaking,
^ to believe anything they said. They love to feign. What-
* ever may be the topic discussed, they think they know all
* about it, they form different opinions concerning it, and
* conduct themselves altogether as if they were perfectly
* informed ; and if a Man listens and believes, they insist, and
* in various ways deceive and seduce him.'
Hebrew Scholars.
* 13 May^ 1748. — Certain Spirits were with me, who in the
life of the body had given much time and labour, not to the
sense of words, but to words themselves, and to the art of
criticism ; some also had laboured in translating the Sacred
Scriptures. Whilst they were present, I declare, that all
things whatsoever, written or thought, were rendered so
obscure and confused, that I could scarcely understand any-
thing ; yea, my understanding was kept, as it were in a
prison, because they directed all thought to words, abstract-
SPIRITUAL DIART. 301
ing the mind from their sense, so that they wearied me
exceedingly, even to indignation. Moreover they imagined
themselves wiser than others, when in fact, in true intelli-
gence, they are inferior to rustics and children.
^ 22 May^ 1748. — It was frequently shewn me, that critics,
Hebrew scholars, compilers of lexicons, and translators of
Moses and the Prophets, have comprehended less than the
unlettered ; for the study of words tends to divert the mind
from their meaning. They get into their head some notion of
a word and its letters, and to that notion they sacrifice the
spirit of the sentence. This has been demonstrated to me by
a lively experience.'
Martyrs.
' 17 Sept,^ 1748. — I conversed with Spirits about Martyrs,
^ because some have maintained, that those who have worn
' the crown of martyrdom will bear rule in Heaven.
' They who attribute merit to themselves, and desire to
' rule in Heaven, are not true Martyrs, because such a desire
' is neither heavenly, nor characteristic of true faith.
' Moreover there are many kinds of Martyrs, as Quakers
' and others. Indeed every heresy can boast of its Martyrs ;
^ for those, who have imposed on themselves some conviction,
' are ready, yea willing, to suffer death in support of their
*• phantasies. In monastic houses many pictures exist of
' Martyrs imdergoing death, for which they were canonized ;
' yet there are numbers of men who have undergone equal
' dangers and death for the love of women.'
Spirits associated with Places and Dress.
*• 17 Oct.^ 1748. — I have observed, that whenever I hear of
^ anything without seeing it, I attach to it an idea of place.
' This idea is of course a fiction, the event having occurred in
^ a place quite imlike that which I imagined. I have also
* observed, that when I have been for some time in one
802 SPIRITUAL DIART.
chamber, 8o that it has become familiar to me, I am better
able to master my ideas therein than elsewhere. Thus
yesterday, having removed to the adjoining room, where I
was aecustomed«to write, a kind of tranquillity ensued among
the Spirits around me, at which I wondered. Spirits desire
to have their ideas connected with place, and thus rendered
determinate The reason is, that an idea is not fixed
or finited without space, or, which is the same thing, without
structure. Spirits draw back the foot when thinking of
places, which is a kind of sign, that places and material things
serve as fulcra for their thoughts.
* 18 Oct^ 1748. — Upon going into the adjoining chamber,
it seemed to me as if a solitude had been created, and that
the Spirits had left me. All the while they were present in
the next room, where were my books and other things, which
they had seen. Hence it may be inferred, that the ideas of
Spirits find their basis in books, utensils, light, fire, &c.
When I left these, my connection with them was broken, and
therefore a sense of solitude was induced.
* The case was the same when I put on a garment different
firom that which I had worn for several months. I then
seemed to the Spirits so much like another person, that they
scarcely knew me.
^ Thus it appears that the ideas of Spirits are terminated
in material things, upon the removal of which, they know not
where they are and disappear.
* 28 Oct. — You will previously have seen, that when I
moved into another chamber the Spirits were immediately
estranged, not knowing where they were ; and, that a change
in my clothes produced the same effect — a striking proof that
Spirits ground their ideas in material things without which
they are absent.
' There are Spirits who use my books (which are four, and
in which I am writing this journal) for this purpose. Some
prefer one book, some another.'
SPIRITUAL DIAKT. 303
Boys Fighting.
' 20 Ocf., 1748. — Seeing some boys fighting I felt a very
high degree of delight flowing in from certain Spirits ; from
which it is plain how much they love enmities. It is pven
me to know instantly the character of Spirits, and not to
believe, that the feelings which they insinuate are my own ;
as people generally do, who credit themselves with whatever
occurs in their minds.'
Our Author confesses himself the happiest of Men,
' 20 Oct^ 1748. — Some think, that those who are in the
^ Faith should abandon all the delights of life and pleasures of
' the body : but this I can assert, that delights and pleasures
' have never been denied to me; for I have been permitted to
' enjoy not only the pleasures of the body and the senses, like
' others, but I have also had such delights and felicities of life
' as, I believe, no person in the whole world ever before en-
' joyed. My delights and felicities have been greater and
' more exquisite than any one can imagine or believe.'
Prayers.
' 24 Oc^, 1748. — It was perceived that prayers effect nothing
' while merely intended to deprecate evils and the thought is,
' ^ Provided only I shall have made deprecation I shall obtun
' ' remission of sins.' Sins arc not remitted imless confessed
' tnily from the heart, attended with a sort of internal torture
^ and anguish, and confession of vileness ; in which and after
' which prayers avail. Otherwise prayers, sacraments and
* external rites effect nothing ; nay, they rather confirm a
* man in evil and quiet liis conscience, so that he returns to
' his former vileness.'
Spirits plotting against our Author in London Streets.
' 2 ^01?., 1748. — It was often observed, that when I was
' in the Streets, Evil Spirits vrished to cast me under the
304 SPIRITUAL DIART.
^ wheels of carriages ; the effort was in fact habitual to them.
* To-day I noticed particulariy, that they were in the constant
* endeavour to do so. I was enabled to perceive, that Evil
^ Spirits made the attempt, and that indeed such mischief is
^ their life. I perceived likewise, that Man is continually
* preserved by the Lord and their purposes frustrated. Hence
^ it appears, that unless the Lord in every, even the smallest
^ moment, preserved Man, yea even in the least of his steps,
* ho would immediately perish.'
Some Sirens wished to live in our Author,
* 4 Nbv.^ 1748. — There are Sirens who wish above all things
* to be in the body. When I eat, they vrish to eat ; yea, not
' only to seize the food, as it were, with the lips, but to carry
* their hands to the mouth. By these Spirits I have, for
* several days, been infested ; they seeking to obtain the
^ things which I ate, as almond-cakes, pears and pigeons,
^ and to possess my body.
Our Author possessed hy Spirits,
* 13 Nov.^ 1748. — Spirits abide in the minds and memories
^ of Men, but through me they have been enabled to return,
* as it were, to bodily life in the world. They were able to
* lead me, to see through my eyes, and to hear through my
* ears. They might also have talked and written to others
* through me, but it was not permitted ; neither to touch
' others through my hands.
* With other persons the case is different. My state is so
* ordered by the Lord, that I can be possessed by Spirits
* without injury. Others so possessed become rum compos^
^ while I remain altogether in my right mind. Indeed, from
^ the very first beginning of my intercourse with Spirits on-
*ward through several years, I have been as I was before,
* without the "slightest observable difference.
SPIRITUAL DIARY. 305
' This privilege therefore can pertain to him only, who
^ is in Faith, and bj no means to any others, as they
' would immediately perish. Such is the state of the world
* at this day, that whoever is possessed by Spirits incurs the
^ peril of his life, so intense is the infernal hatred which now
' reigns.
* 27 Nov.^ 1748. — On shaking hands with a certain person
^ I had a feeling, that it was not I but somebody else who
^ grasped the hand. A Spirit said, that he distinctly felt, that
^ it was he who took the hand instead of me. So it seems
^ that a Spirit really had possession of my hand with its sense
of touch.'
(
He who on Earth loves his Neighbour as himself will in
Heaven love his Neighbour better than himself.
' 30 Nov,^ 1748. — It was perceived, that he who in the life
of the body, loves his Neighbour as himself, in the other life
loves his Neighbour more tlian himself ; for love is then indefi-
nitely increased. Here one cannot go beyond the point of
loving his Neighbour as himself, because he is in corporeals ;
but with those who have passed out of this life, love becomes
pure and at length angelic, and angelic love cares for others
more than for self.'
Advised to suppress his Mevelations.
* 9 Dec. J 1748. — There are Spirits who are averse to any-
*' thing being said about the things revealed to me. It was
^ replied, that these revelations were instead of miracles, and,
^ that without them men would not know the nature of my
* work, nor buy it, nor read it, nor understand it, nor be
^ affected by it, nor believe it ; in a word, they would remain
^ in ignorance and would vrish to hear nothing of the interiors
* of the Word, which they regard as vain phantasies. Such
^ as are simply men of learning will for the most part reject
* my revelations.'
X
906
* 26 JhrcAy 1749. — It was pocnrvd, tkst mj tsAer was
^ sent forth b^ dbe Lord for dbe perfot mange of rarioas uses
* amoit^ kb folbw-mimu »fw kne anl now tlmrer because his
^ del^ttt coi^steii on aa aedre l&fe.^
^ 6 Afrits 1719. — I dreamt darii^ die niglit and on waking
^ spoke with SpcrttSw wkd said diej kad been watdung aronnd
^me^ and diAt dieT had indaced die dream and ex{Nneasly
^ caused eTerrthm^* which I remembeTed and related. From
^ tkib it b stiU miore maniliest to me^ that dreams are firc»n the
^ Wodd of Spirtts.^
^ 13 AfriL 1749. — It ^pean fin»ri tJie murefsal order of
^ Heaven and HelL that it » ordained* that JLtH shall punish
^ itself* and then tend to abo&h itself Soch b the DiTine
^ order in the pennusioD of EtiL It is ako a universal law,
^ that Love :$haQ reward itself Thus it £ures with everv one
^ just as he wilts to othcrsw^
A JK^'ussiim abitrnt #iW Orifim vf Gi»d amd EnL
^ i\ Aj/riU 1749. — It was shewn me how numerous they
^ are who believe^ that Faidi withoot works b saving
^ From my sayings that Charity was what saved^ and dwelling
^ at 9iUuo length on that pointy they infested me during the
^ whole tught« The Preachers of Faidi without Works are
^ strongly vindictive, nor do they £ul to inflict punishment on
^ hiiu^ who does aught in oppositioai to them. That they are
^ miiorgiviug was clearly evinced by their peraistendy infesting
^ me the whole night, and in the morning they were as intent
* as ever,
^ When I spoke with them at an eariy hour they told me,
^ thi^t 1 was nothing because I was impelled to think, to speak,
SPIRITUAL DIAKY. 307
and to do everything, and that therefore I was nothing of
myself; which indeed many Spirits manifestly perceived.
' I have now been for four years in such a state, that I
have neither thought, nor spoken anything from myself. I
see, that when I seem to be, as it were, myself in thinking or
speaking, yet upon inquiry, there are others instantly found
who have prompted me.
* When I spoke with them therefore in the morning, it was
given me to say, that tliis was weU, inasmuch that if any-
thing evil is thought or spoken it is not mine, but proceeds
from Evil Spirits ; wherefore it is not appropriated by me.
^ If I should believe, that the evil was from myself, then
the evil would properly belong to me ; thus I should add
evil to evil.
^ On the contrary : whatever is good is from the Lord ;
and as when I speak truth or do good I do not ascribe merit
to myself, so neither do I ascribe to myself sin.
^ He therefore, who is in true faith and believes the case to
be as it is, is guiltless of committing sin. Whatever evil he
seems to himself to do, knowing that Evil Spirits have been
present and persuaded him to it, the evil is not then appro-
priated to him.*
^ As many of those with whom I conversed were PreacherSi
they said that the doctrine was sound, wishing the case to be
their own, that they might account themselves free from sin.
* This proposition is of firequent ooourrence in Swedenborg't writing!.
In his * Divine Providence^* No. 320, he states, * That if a man would beUeve,
' as is the trath, that everything good and true is from the I^ord, and erery-
' thing evil and false from HeU, he would neither appropriate to himself
* goodness, and make it meritorious, nor would he appropriate to himself evil,
' and make himself guilty of it.' In the ^Areana OoBUtHa,* No. 6,659, he says,
' If perchance Good Spirits speak or do evil, they are not punished, but par^
' doned, and also excused ; for their end is not to speak evil, nor to do it ;
' and they know, that such things are excited in them from Hell, so as to
' come forth without any blame of theirs ; this is also perceiv^ from their
' struggling against such evils, and afterwards from their grief.' Bee also
Non. 4,161, 6,206, 6,324-6.
x2
308 SPIRITUAL DIARY.
' It was given me to say to them^ that such could never be
their case, unless they were in the Faith of Charity ; that it
was not enough to know the truth, but that it must be ac-
knowledged and believed. If acknowledged in this life it
would be far more deeply acknowledged in the other. Then
also they would find, that no one can have Faith but from the
Lord, nor consequently confess the origin of good and evil.
* All this the Preachers said was true, for they had preached,
that Faith was from the Lord alone ; yet they had never truly
acknowledged it.
* It was farther said, that they had preached, that when
any one did evil, he allowed himself to be led of the Devil ;
and as to themselves, that when they preached well, that
they were led by the Holy Spirit, and had prayed, that the
Holy Spirit would guide their thoughts and words. Never-
theless they had not believed those professions ; and this they
acknowledged. They were remitted into the state of self-
love from which they had thus spoken of the inspiration of
the Holy Spirit and of the Devil, and then they confessed,
that they had no actual belief in their own words.'
Hypocrites,
' 16 August^ 1749. — The aspect of Hypocrites was shewn
' me. They have no face, but an open throat, black within,
* and yawning exceedingly, with a few snow-white teeth.
' They have no cheeks, but a quantity of hair depending like
' an uncouth mass of wool.'
The Lord*8 Providence.
* 15 Sept. 1749. I discoursed largely with Spirits and
' Angels concerning the Providence of the Lord Man
' walks as it were in thick forests, the egress from which he
* docs not know, but when he finds it, he attributes the dis-
* covcry to himself. Providence in the meanwhile is as one
SPIRITUAL DIARY. 309
* who stands in a tower, sees the wanderings of the man, and
' leads him without his knowledge to the place of egress.'
A disappointed Lover excited our Author to kill himself.
' There was a certain woman (Sara Hesselia) who inwardly
cherished such an aversion to her parents, that she meditated
poisoning them. She took it into her head, that I was
willing to marry her, and when she found out that she was
mistaken, she was seized with such hatred, that she thought
of killing me, had it been possible. She died not long
afterwards.
' Some time before the faculty of conversing with Spirits
was opened in me, I was impelled to commit suicide with a
knife. The impulse grew so strong, that I was forced to
hide the knife out of sight in my desk.
' I have now discovered, that Sara Hesselia was the Spirit
who excited the suicidal impulse as often as I saw the knife.
From this it may appear, that men may be unconsciously
infested with Spirits, who hated them during their life on
earth.'
Here we must stop. Our selections have been made from
a surface of fifteen hundred printed pages, and they may give
the reader some idea of the multifarious and extraordinary
contents of Swedenborg's ' Spiritual Diary.'* We shall have
yet more surprising entries to read from it ere we have done.
( 310 )
CHAPTER IV.
THE PUBLICATION OF THE 'ARCANA CCELESTIA/
Whilst Swedenborg was making these entries in his ^Diary^
he was busily engaged on his first theological publication, the
^ Arcana Ccelestia.^ The first volume was issued in 1749, and
at the rate of a volume a year, the work was completed in
1756 in eight quartos. It will be observed, that Swedenborg
was upwards of sixty years of age when he thus manifested
himself to the world as Divine and Seer. Perhaps I ought to
use some other word than, ^manifested;' for he studiously
preserved the anonymous; and not until 1768, after twenty
years of active auihordiip, did he allow his name to appear on
any title-page.
The publisher of the ^Arcana Ccelestia^ was John Lewis,
Paternoster Row, London. The first volume fell stiU-bom
from the press. Swedenborg was in Stockholm, and in the
^ Diary'' he describes his failure and accoimts for its causes thus —
^ In what way many will receive that which is written
by 9ne.^
* I have received letters informing me, that not more than
* four copies have been sold in the space of two months. I
* communicated this to the Angels. They were surprised, but
* they said, it must be left to the Lord's Providence ; that His
* Providence is of such a nature, that it compels no one ; and
^ that it is not fitting, that others should read the ^ Arcana
* Cceleatia^ before those who are in the faith.
^ That such is the case is also known from, the advent of
SMALL DEMAND FOR THE WORK. 311
the Lord into the world. He was able to compel men to
receive His words and Himself, but He compelled no one ; in
like manner He acted through the Apostles. Nevertheless
there were found those, who became receivers of the truth ;
they were those who were in faith, and to them were the
Apostles sent.
' The state of the Christian World at this day was also
proved by this experiment. Spirits were brought into the
state of mind in which they had been during their life in the
body. They were then permitted to think about those things,
which have been written by me concerning the Internal
Sense of Scripture and the Future Life ; and they were then
as if they would vomit. They were thus disgusted with my
writings, which themselves also confessed.'*
He had consulted the Angels as to the number of copies
he ought to print, but he found them poor, because pliable,
advisers. They merely perceived his evangelical purpose,
and if he proposed an edition of five hundred, or ten thousand
they equally approved. Hence he writes —
* I have been taught by manifold experience, that Angels
' and Spirits will sanction counsels as wise and advantageous,
' which are quite the reverse. They only regard the good
' intention, and can be induced to affirm any thing, which
* promises to advance it.'f
Among the few readers the ^Arcana Ccdeatia^ found was
one Stephen Penny of Dartmouth. Anxious to learn some-
thing of its author Penny wrote to publisher Lewis, who sent
his letter t9 ' The General Advertiserj in which it appeared on
Christmas Dav, 1749. Here it is with Lewis's note to the
editor of the * Advertiser'' —
' Sir, — If you will insert the following letter in your paper.
* The date of the entry is uncertain. The nearest date is 15 Sept., 1749,
at the end of No. 4,389. The next which follows is 11 Jan., 1752, at the end
of No. 4,550. It was prohahly written ahout the beginning of 1750.
t ' SpirUuai Diary; No. 1,164, 4 Alarch, 1748.
■^ 3m?r meoMx :tht ^acuw a ik Lrarwd WotU to prner
*.. V
- I%raiaMC&. 1^ Octi.)iKr. 1749.
.^WM /-ir*Ww^ ^xv-iCK»x nr :te jt&ffiiest^ rf die dde. I p«e-
^ :$i?tt^v /oik^c^ :ir f Tnmit it JLnn&fii isf j«ki wm «ir. The
V i^VS^'^^ittt*^ iw-^w it ^ikMksvrr ^&k^ i«»£i^ of h has given
^!***N 4»t>i tiw ^^ :iwef -tii^iecijii i-iia w&sis i».ife b to be
V |^4|^«ic^VK ini*c«r tttf :i^ :?!J^lll»c M«w ;»» <^tWsi s^ anj new
^jKt^>iK^ivu K4|j|i%rtti?v 'w^'i I 99fc^teMi»i tt> be designed
v;iliitii«^lv. ^ :^«B!vtr. iic 3?/4ij>£ia: ▼•« few Wcasse I very
^ t«^^^ ^^*^ ttt> -K ^ "Ht&iic Tuo^fcs^ jml cva»fi)C3esidy^ future
^ t V%^v iMj;; u'^^S^^ttifv i^tisoiu'^ ^ «^ die kttstmical part of
^ ^V vV^ ^Vi^uvvtiv %iiv'^ -^^mw- ^«i£5 ^ lei^raurd tbe Jewish
N ^VA^'itvx^K'it utu |(^m taiifi jik'%>/Ka£ fe^ 9ix> ferhtly regarded
^ l>\ 5^^ »iv^SA .^tiv ^% ^V ^tfi^ftseit^ Olscijcsjtt \WwiJ • pn>ved to
V ^ .<wx Ao^^vi^s »tcvi*>tM5:^xrv loii «^ 3«v>f^ssMy wc tbe know-
V ^'V -iiW*^i*vNi MC^^v %^*Kvc W w^ ij it Mr* Law?*)
N v^Vk'V^ v^vysNA % sv«e4*^*i:^*i^i.^ A?w wf jy wm »>f > tti> draw tbeir
' ^^\ .^»v>*»x*^ "^i^ h it< A ^iwsistti;^ Wiiftr f^>wirtr fe jprescribed
^ thv vc\\v*<ivi5 v^ A &*s^ ?^ *3Biwvr^ tv^ k«K>w wbat dependence
^ \ uw^\ w.*x^v^ v^^»M >v^ %tU x\^^ m^kcii %?JK&:e*
^ ^i\ w^csr stt^"^ b^ju»bt^ ^«i?rvant,
* Stephen Penny.
\w w^ ^*^ ^"^^ ^^ ^^M ^ *Mr«^ ^^^^
A NEW BID FOR POPULARITY. 313
* P.S. — Perhaps the author was concerned in the publica-
^ tion of Mr. Hutchinson^s works ?* Has he published any
* other work? and at what price?'
Lewis appends this advertisement —
^ This large Latin book is neatly printed in 4to. ; and sold
^ bj Mr. Nourse, at the Lamb, opposite Katherine Street, in
*' the Strand ; Mr. Ware, at the Bible on Ludgate Hill ; and
^ by John Lewis, printer of the same, as above mentioned :
' price 6s. unbound.'
The publication of the first volume proving so complete a
failure some extra effort was felt requisite over the second.
This Swedenborg and Lewis made. They had the second
volume translated into English by one John Marchant, hired
probably out of Grub Street,t and issued it in numbers at a
very cheap rate : the first number consisting of fifty-two pages
quarto was sold for 8d. In * The Oenercd Advertiser^ of
Friday, 23rd February, 1749-60, it was thus announced —
' This Day is Published^ [Price 8J.)
^ Both in Latin and English, that the Reader may have it
' in either Tongue separately,
* The First Number of the ^Arcana CoBlestia]^ or, Hea-
' venly Secrets. Being an Exposition of the Bible entirely
^ new, and such as was never attempted before in any language
' whatsoever. Written in Latin by a Foreign Nobleman.
* Allading to John Hatchinaon, Steward to the Duke of Somerset, bom
1674 ; died 1737. Hatcliinson held, that the Old Testament contained a
true system of natural history as well as religion, and opposed the New-
tonian theory of the universe with many arguments. Hutchinsonianism it
little heard of now, but last century it was the doctrine of not a few of the
most erudite and orthodox divines, as Bishop Home, Parkhorst, Romaine,
and Jones of Navland.
t 'llie translation is not a good one; eridently a piece of hack-work.
Copies of this English version of the ^Arcana OotleUia,* Vol. II., qoarto,
London, 1750, are very scarce ; only three or four are known to be extant,
and arc valued at high prices by collectors.
314 LEWIS'S ADTEBTISEMENT.
A fuller account maj be had gratiB of John Lewis,
^ Printer and Publisher in Paternoster Row : Mr. Nourse in
^the Strand; and Mr. Ware on Ludgate Hill, where the
^ number may be had, as well as at the Pamphlet-shops.'
^ The fuller account gratis ' is long, and I have been
tempted to abridge it, but on further consideration, give it
entire. In his puff Lewis intermingle the shopman, the critic
and the disciple with somewhat queer effect. As Swedenborg
was in Sweden, I presume, he had no share in its concoction.
* Paternoster Row, 5 February, 1750.
^ Advertisement, by John Lewis, printer and publisher, in
Paternoster Bow, near Cheapside, London. Be it known
unto all the Learned and Curious, that this day is published,
the first number of ^ Arcana Coelestia^ or Heavenly Secrete^
^ which are in the Sacred ScriptureSj or Ward of the Lardj laid
^ open ; as they are found in the xvi. chapter of Oenesia •*
' together with the wonderfid things that have been seen in the
* World of Spirits^ and in the Heaven of Angels.^
^ This work is intended to be such an exposition of the
whole Bible as was never attempted in any language before.
The Author is a Learned Foreigner, who wrote and printed
the first volume of the same work but last year, all in Latin,
wluch may be seen at my shop in Paternoster Bow, as above-
mentioned.
^ And now the second volume is printing, both in Latin and
English ; to be published in cheap numbers, that the Public
may have it in an easier manner, in either tongue, than in
whole volumes.
^ It must be confessed that this nation abounds with a
variety of commentaries and expositions on the Holy Bible ;
yet when we consider what an inexhaustible fund of know-
ledge the Sacred Scripture contains, the importance of the
subjects it treats of, and the vast concern every man has in
those things they relate and recommend, we may cease to
wonder that so many ingenious pens have been employed in
lewis's adtestisement. 315
sounding the depths of this vast ocean ; and he most be a
very dull writer indeed, who does not find a pretty large
number of readers of any work he may publish of this kind.
I would be far from depreciating the merit of any man's
performance, nay, I will allow, that it is owing to the
labours of learned and pious men, in their disquisitions after
truth in the Bible, that we of this kingdom have been enabled
to discern truth from error, and to know more of the mind
and will of God in His Word, than the Priests of Rome were
willing we should. Yet give me leave to add, that these
sacred writings are capable of speaking to the heart and
understanding of man, by more ways than have been thought
of, or put into practice; and he who can discover new
treasures in these sacred mines, and produce from them such
rich jewels as were never yet seen by the eye of man, will
undoubtedly challenge our strictest attention, and deserve
encouragement in his pious labours. This, then, may be said
of our Author. He has struck out a new path through this
deep abyss, which no man ever trod before ; he has left all
the commentators and expositors to stand on their own
footing ; he neither meddles nor interferes with any of them ;
his thoughts are all his own ; and the ingenious and sublime
turn he has given to everything in the Hcriptures, he has
copied from no man ; and therefore, even in this respect, he has
some title to the regard of the Ingenious and Learned Worid.
^ It is true, when a reader comes to peruse his work, if he
expects to understand him with a slight and cursory reading,
he will find himself greatly mistaken ; his thoughts are too
sublime and lofty to be surveyed with a weak or a wanton
eye ; his language is quite difierent from the common modes
of speech ; and his sense is sometimes so deep and profound,
as not to be readily apprehended by a common understanding.
Whoever therefore takes this book in hand, and finds passages
in it not easily intelligible, let him not throw it by as a thing
of no value, nor content himself with a bare perusal ; but let
316 lewis's adyebtisement.
him read it over and over again ; let him study the drift and
design of the Author ; and I will answer for it, that the more
and oftener he reads, the more instruction and delight he will
receive. The Author has a depth which if once fathomed,
(and it is not unfathomable) will 3deld the noblest repast to a
pious mind. But if any one imagines, that I say this to puff
a book, in the sale of which my interest is so nearly concerned,
any gentleman is welcome to peruse it at my shop, and to
purchase it or not, as his own judgement shaU direct him.
* Nothing recommends a book more effectually to the
public than the eminence and credit of its Author : nothing is
more notorious, than that a weak performance, if it appear
under a great name, shall be better received in the world than
the most sublime and ingenious productions of an obscure
person : so that it is not merit but prejudice, that generally
goyems the judgement of men.
* Though the Author of the ^Arcana CoRlestta^ is undoubt-
edly a very learned and great man, and his works highly
esteemed by the literati^ yet he is no less distinguished for his
modesty than for his great talents, so that he wiU not suffer
his name to be made public. But though I am positively
forbid to discover that, yet I hope he will excuse me if
I venture to mention his benign and generous qualities.
How he bestowed his time and labours in former years, I
am not certainly informed : (though I have heard by those,
who have been long acquainted with him, that they were
employed in the same manner as I am going to relate) but
what I have been an eye-witness to, I can declare with
certain truth ; and therefore I do aver, that this gentleman,
with indefatigable pains and labour, spent one whole year in
studying and writing the first volume of the ^Arcana Ccelestia^^
was at the expense of £200 to print it, and also advanced
£200 more for the printing of this second volume ; and when
ho had done this, he gave express orders, that all the money
that should arise in the sale of this largo work should be given
lewis's advertisement. 317
towards the charge of the Propagation of the Gospel.* He
is so far from desiring to make a gain of his labours, that he
he will not receive one farthing back of the £400 he has ex-
pended ; and for that reason his works wiU come exceedingly
cheap to the Public.
^ I further declare, I have not the least reason in the world
to believe him a bigot to any mode or method of religion ;
I know not what community he belongs to, or whether he
belongs to any ; if any one can guess by his writings, he
knows where to find them. But it matters not what or who
the person is that writes, if his writings are founded on truth|
and agreeable to such learned men as are competent judges
of them. The deepest and most learned, as well as the most
valuable pieces, are sometimes misimderstood and rejected for
many years, even by learned men themselves ; to instance
only three performances out of the many that might be pro-
duced, vtz.^ Locke ' On the Human Under atdnding^^ Milton's
^Paradise Lost^^ and Prideaux's ^^ Connection of the Old and
^ New Testament.^ Those who have been conversant with
books, especially in the trading way, cannot be ignorant of
the difficulties these valuable pieces have met with in making
their way into the world : and it is as remarkable now to
observe, how they have been called for and admired for many
years past.
' How this great work of ^Arcana Ccelestia ' wiU succeed
in the world, is impossible at present to determine. If all
men of learning were of the same mind with the ingenious
and pious Mr. Penny, of Dartmouth, we need not fear success ;
* Lewis, I presume, meant the Society for the Propagatioii of the Gospel
in Foreign Parts, founded in London and incorporated 1701. Of this Society
Bishop Svedbcrg was elected a member, he being Bishop orer the Swedish
Churches in Elngland and Pennsylrania. I have examined the Reports of the
Society for several years subsequent to 1749, but can find no proceeds entered
either under the name of Lewb or Swedenborg from the sale of the ' Areama
' CoaUilxa:
318 lewis's advertisement.
for, in his letter to me, on the publication of the first volume,
are these following words : ' I have long ardently wished to
see the historical part of the Old Testament, which seems
only to regard the Jewish Dispensation (and upon that
account is too lightly regarded by the major part of the
present Christian World), proved to be as delightful, in-
structive, and as necessary for the knowledge of Christians
as the New. This the ^Arcana Ccslestia^ gives me fullest
satisfaction of.' A copy of this letter was printed at large
in ^The Daily Advertiser^ of Christmas-day, 1749. Now
this delightfol, instructive, and necessary knowledge cannot
be expected from this part of Holy Writ, unless the historical
part of the Old Testament be allegorized in some such
manner as our Latin Author has here done it. And the
great and learned, as well as the inspired Apostle Paul,
clearly give encouragement to this way of writing. (Gal.
iv. 24.) And our Author neither rejects, nor disturbs the
literal sense by his allegorical exposition.
* Soon after the publication of Mr. Penny's letter before
mentioned, a grave, judicious, and learned gentleman was
pleased to call at one of the booksellers where this famous
Latin book was appointed to be sold : and when he had cast
his eye over part of the work, he inquired who the author
was ; but being told that the author would not be known,
" Well," said the gentleman, *' I confess that at these years I
" am not fond of new acquaintance, but should be extremely
" glad to have some conversation with him ; for," continued
he, with great earnestness, " I never saw, nor heard, nor read
" of so surprising a man in all my days !"
' Any one of small judgement may guess at the cheapness
of the work, when he finds that six hundred and forty quarto
pages, in Latin, of the first volume, are sold for no more than
Gs. unbound. But this second volume, which is now pub-
lishing in Latin and English, will be unaccountably cheap,
as any one may condude, even by the postage of the Latin
lewis's advertisement. 319
^ copj from abroad : for the bare postage of this first number
^ cost no less than 12«., and now it is printed^ does make fiffy-
*• two quarto pages in the English tongue ; and all to be sold
*' for no more than 8d.y which is not half the price that such a
^ quantity of paper and print is generally sold for. The post-
^ age of the second number came to ISs. ; and that of the third
^ amounted to 22«. ; and jet these two numbers are to be sold
^ for no more than 9d. each ; so that from hence it is easy to
^ imagine how cheap the whole will be, especially when printed
^ in such a grand and pompous manner at so low a price. But
^ it is the generous Author's absolute command that it should
^ be so, who, it is plain, wants neither purse nor spirit to carry
^ on his laudable imdertaking.
^ As the copy comes from a foreign coimtry, and as one
^ number may contain nearly double the quantity of another,
^ it is utterly impossible to fix a certain regular time for the
' publication of each. But this the Public may be assured of,
^ that when a fresh number is published, it shall be advertised
' in the newspapers. Those who are pleased to give their
* orders to the News-Carriers, will have every number as cer-
^ tainly as though they were apprised of the certain time of its
^ coming out. And the price will be printed on the title of
^ each English number (and every Latin number will be of the
^ same price with the English), so that the readers may be sure
^ that they will not be imposed upon ; for sometimes the bulk
^ of the book will plainly appear to be worth five times as much
* as will be required for it.
^ Those who are so happy as to be well acquainted with
^ the Latin tongue, will be highly delighted with the Author's
^ elegant and sublime language.'
This cheapness and these advertisements bore little or no
result. The public would not buy. The English translation
and the issue in numbers were discontinued with the com-
pletion of the second volume. The ^Arcana Cueleatia ' had,
however, to be printed, whether readers could be found for it
320 law's contempt for swedenborg.
«
or not, and volume after volume came forth until the eighth
in 1756.
If there was any man more than another who might have
been expected to welcome the ^Arcana Coslestta^^ it would
have been William Law, but the reverse proved to be the
case. Writing to a friend in London from his retreat, King's
Cliff, Northamptonshire, he says —
'9 April, 1758.
' Pray tell Mr. Ward, that I desire him to buy me the 8th
* volume of the ^ Arcana Caelestta:^ he bought the first seven
* volumes for me, and so knows the volume that I have not.
* I shall never go through them, but as I have gone so far in
* the expense, I shall take this last volume.'
Stephen Penny, whose letter of inquiry to Lewis has been
quoted, wrote to Law, asking—
'30 September, 1755.
* What is your opinion of the ' Arcana CoelestiaV a book
' publishing in Latin in London. The author is a Swedish
* nobleman called Emanuel Swedenborg.'
Unfortunately we have not Law's reply, but he is said
to have answered a similar inquirer — ' Swedenborg is very
* voluminous, but that is not his worst fault.' In a letter
addressed to his neighbour, the Rev. Thomas Hartley, Hector
of Winwick, Northamptonshire, we find him raging against
Swedenborg in a very distressing manner. After reciting
some of Swedenborg's opinions he goes on to say —
* Now can any man of erudition and in his right senses
' adopt such meaningless stuff for Divine revelation, or judge
* of it as other than the profusions of a distempered brain ? . . .
' Neither is it sustained by one single argument or proof, but
' is to be received, however absurd, unintcllectual, and where
' intelligible inconsistent, because of the ipse dixit of a fantastic
^ Mineralist, who has betrayed through all his works a notorious
vnoFMioe of both the diction and documents of theology.
NO MARKET FOR THE ^ARCANA COSLEBTIA/ 321
' Interspersed with his doctrines we find many false distino-
^ tions, Socinian tenets, deistical reasonings, and mystical
* whims. These, however, are generally so feebly enforced as
*' to betray, not only an utter ignorance of Christianity, but a
^ disordered intellect A philosopher and novice in the
^ revealed Word, when turned enthusiast, is of all men the most
^ liable to heresy ; but the enormities of this Baron's deliriums
^ argue both the most abject illiterature with most prodigious
^ blindness and infatuation.'*
Such bitter and intemperate writing almost justifies Wes-
ley's dictum concerning Law — ' He was a godly man, but
^ those who dared to resist the least of his opinions, ho trod
^ as dirt under his feet.'
Dr. Arnold has called the 18th Century the seed-time of
Modem Europe. Swedenborg was one of the sowers under
its drear sky, and he fain would have been a reaper ; but the
long long weary years which must needs intervene ere the
seeds scattered broadcast from his hands should germinate
were, mercifully perhaps, hidden from him. Any one who
knows the ^Arcana Ccelestia^ and has a fair conception of
the state of the Mind of the World in the middle of last
Century must smile at the idea of such a work being offered
in such a market with any hope of sale. As Carlyle says of
Frederick the Great so we may of Swedenborg —
^ He lived in a Century which has no history and can have
* little or none. A Century so opulent in accumulated falsities, —
^ sad opulence descending on it by inheritance, always at com-
^ pound interest, and always largely increased by fresh acquire-
* These facts concerning Swedenborg and Law are deriyed from a very
curious book by Mr. Christopher Walton, Watchmaker, Ludgate Hill, Lon-
don, published in 1S54, and entitled ' Notes and Materials for an AdequaU
^Biography of WiUiam LawJ* See pages 502, 597, and 158. There is a
second letter about Swedenborg quoted by Mr. Walton and supposed to be
Law*8, but it is eridently by another hand and written some years subsequent
to Swedeuborg's death in 1772, and consequently to Law's, which took place
in 1761.
Y
322 COMMON-SENSE. .
^ ment on such immensity of standing capital ; — opulent in that
* bad way as never Century before was ! Which had no longer
^ the consciousness of being false, so false had it grown ; and
^ was so steeped in falsity, and impregnated with it to the
* very bone, that — in fact the measure of the thing was full,
* and a French Revolution had to end it.'*
The ^ Arcana Ccelestia ' was completed in 1756, and at the
beginning of 1757 Oliver Goldsmith was serving as usher in
Dr. Milner's school at Peckham. One day Miss Hester Milner
asked Mr. Goldsmith what particular commentator on the
Scriptures he would recommend. After a pause the usher
replied, with much earnestness, that in his belief Common-
Sense was the best interpreter of the Sacred Writings, f
Goldsmith answered wisely. We now pass on to a review
of the * Arcana Ccelestia^ a scriptural commentary, and would
ask the reader to accompany us as far as possible with his
Common-Sense. The response which Swedenborg anxiously
and vainly looked for from the Learning of his century he
sometimes found in simple Common-Sense. When writing
on the Apocalypse, with his mind Aill of his subject, he
came to an inn and poured out his thoughts to the good
wife, Tisula Bodama her name. * She was a person,' he says,
^ of simple-hearted faith. She understood clearly all I said ;
^ but there was a learned man present who did not under-
^ stand, nay, could not understand. So the case is with many
* other things.'}
It would have been for Swedenborg's help and happiness
had he taken hint and counsel from this experience ; but, as
we shall see, he lived to the end, hankering aft^r recognition
from the Scribes and Pharisees, from authorities, civil and
• * ]f\redenck the Cheat,' Vol. I., page 10.
t FoiBter's * QMtmiih,' Vol. T., page 83.
% * S^firikul DkKrp,' No. 5.997.
(XMtfMON-PBRCEPTION. 328
ecclesiastical. Yet no one, theoretically, knew better the reason
of the Divine choice of fishermen for Apostles, in the capacity
possessed by simple Common-Sense for the reception of the
profoundest spiritual truths — a capacity, which scholastic
pursuits not unfrequently seriously injures. Common-Senae
he glorified under the title of Common-Perception, sajring —
* Who does not know from Common-Perception, that a
man who leads a good life is saved, and that a man who leads
a wicked one is condemned? also, that a man who leads a
good life, at death enters the society of Angeb, and there
hears, sees and speaks like a man ? also, that he who does
what is just from justice has Conscience ?
* If, however, he departs from Common-Perception and
begins to reason, then he does not know what Conscience is ;
or, that the Soul can see, hear and speak like a man ; or, that
goodness of life is any more than giving to the poor
Hence many of the Learned who have thought much, and
especially, who have written much, have weakened and
obscured their Common-Perception, yea, have destroyed it ;
hence the simple see more clearly what is good and true,
than those who think themselves wise.
* This Common-Perception comes by influx from Heaven.
.... That this is the case you may know by experience.
Tell any one who is in Common-Perception some truth, and
he will see it. Tell him, that we are, live, and move from
God, and in God, and he will see it. Tell him, that God
dwells in love and wisdom in man, and he will see it. Tell
him moreover, that the Will is the receptacle of love, and the
Understanding of wisdom, and explain it a little, and he will
see it. Tell him, that God is Love itself and Wisdom itself,
and he will see it. Ask him what Conscience is, and he vrill
tell you.
^ Say the same things to one of the Learned, who does not
think from Common-Perception, but from principles and
notions, and he will not see them.
y 2
324 OOMMON-fiENSS.
^ CoiLuder afterwards, Which b the wiser ?^
• ' Ditdne Ixwe and Wisdom,' Na 361.
' The old Anaximenes, seeking, I sappose, for a aooioe sufficientlj diffosiTeY
' said, that Mind most heintke tnr^ which, when all men breathed, thej were
* filled with one intelligenoe. And when men hare larger measnres of reason,
'as JBsop, Cervantes, Franklin, Soott, they gain in universality, or are no
' longer confined to a few associates, bat are good company for all persona, —
' philosophers, women, men of fiwhion, tradesmen, and servants. Indeed, an
* older philosopher than Anaximenes, namely. Language itself, had taoght to
' distinguish saperior or purer sense as Common SemeJ B. W. Emerson in
< Memoin of Margaret FvOer 0$$oU,' Yd. I., page 289.
( 325
CHAPTER V.
THE ' ARCANA CCELESTIA/*
Eight yolumes quarto on Grenesis and Exodus make certainly
an alarming appearance, but such is the ^Arcana CceUstiaJ'
The purpose of the work is the exposition of the Inner
Meaning, or Spiritual Sense of the sacred text, and verse by
verse, word by word is methodically taken up, and each cir-
cumstance assigned to some origin in the Human Mind, and
thence in God. As is natural and allowable in a commentator,
Swedenborg breaks perpetually into short and long digressions
illustrative of his text, and deals with a numberless variety
of questions in spiritual science. The bulk of his work is
greatly increased by the insertion, between each chapter, of
papers descriptive of his own angelic and diabolic experienceSi
of the constitution of Heaven, the World of Spirits, and Hell,
and of the Theology of the Angels. The whole is written in
his customary diffuse style and with wearisome repetitions.
As was his practice he numbered his paragraphs in the ^ Arcana
* Ccelestia ;' there are 10,837 ; some consisting of a few lines,
and others of several pages : and like the chapters and verses
of the Bible they prove very convenient for reference.
* 'Arcana Ccdentia qwB in Sariptura Saera^ ieu Verho Domini $mUdeUda:
' Hie IVimum quas in Qeneai. Una cum Mirabilibus quce vita sunt in Mundo
' Spirituuniy et in Oodo Angehrum.* Pars I., 1749. Pars II., 1750. Pars
III., 1751. Pars IV., 1752. Pars V., 1753.
' Arcana CceUtiia qua in Seriptura 8aera^ seu Vefho Domini »unt ddeda :
* Hie quoi in Exodo^ &c. Pars I., 1753, Pars II., 1754. Pars III., 1766.
In all eight quarto yolomeB, London, 1749-56.
326 GENESIS I. TO XI. ALLEQORICAL.
Swedenborg pnbGshed many woiks sobseqnent to the
^ Arcana Ccdestia^ bat there is Httk of value in tliem wluch
may not be found diffused over its multitudinous pages : indeed
several are no more than reprints, abstracts and compilations
from its abundance. An extensive review of the ^ Arcana '
might therefore serve as a compendious notice of Sweden-
borgian Philosophy, but the comfort of the reader wiU be best
provided for, if instead of dealing with so vast a matter in
a angle block, we break it into fragments by describing
Swedenborg^s various publications in the order of their appear-
ance ; and by confining our attention in the present article to
the speciality of the ^ Arcana Ckdt9da^ namely, to its doctrine
of Human History, and particulariy of Jewish History.
The Book of Greneas from its b^inning to the call of
Abram, chapters I. to XL, says Swedenborg, was not written
by Moses, but is> a fragment of an older Scripture : neither are
those early chapters matter-of-fact history, but compositions,
in the form of history, symbolical of things celestial and
spiritual. With Abram actual history b^us.
^ They who do not think beyond the sense of the letter,
cannot believe otherwise, than that the Creation described in
the first and second chapters of Grenesis means the Creation
of the Universe ; and, that within six days Heaven and
Earth and Sea and aU tilings tfierein, and Men in tiie likeness
of God, were created : but. Who, if he ponder deeply, cannot
see, that the Creation of the Universe is not there meant?
Coniniou-Sense might teach, that the operations there de-
scribed were impossible : as, that there were Days and Light
and Darkness, and green Herbs and fruitful Trees before the
appearance of the Sun and Moon. Similar difficulties follow,
which arc scarcely credited by any one who thinks Interiorly :
as, that the Woman was built from the rib of the Man ;
diat two trees were set in Paradise, and the fruit of one
forbidden to be eaten; that a Serpent discoursed with the
MOST ANCIENT AND ANCIENT CUUBCUE8. 327
^ Wife of the Man, who was the wisest of mortals, and deceived
^ them both ; and that the universal Hmnan Bace was on that
^ account condemned to Hell.
^ Nevertheless it is to be noted, that all things in that story,
^ even to the smallest iota, are Divine, and contain in them
^ arcana, which before the Angeb in the Heavens are manifest
* as in clear day,' ♦
In these eleven allegorical chapters Swedenborg discovers
the history of two Dispensations. The first, he designates the
Most Ancient Church, and the time of its existence, the GK>lden
Age ; the second the Ancient Church, and the time of its
existence, the Silver Age.
The rise of the Most Ancient Church he finds symbolized
in the story of Creation ; its culmination, in Adam and Eve
in Eden ; its decline, in the events following the eating of the
Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil ; and its destruction,
in the Deluge.
The story of the Ancient Church begins with Noah and is
continued in his posterity ; its ruin is depicted in the erection
of the Tower of Babel, the confusion of the tongues of its builders
and their ^ scattering abroad upon the face of all the earth.'
A third rigivM commences with the call of Abram, at which
point the allegorical style of narration is exchanged for the
matter-of-fact.
The Most Ancient Church.
The curious description we found in the ^ De CuUu et Amcre
*• DeV of the Creation of the Earth, of its Flora and Fauna,
and of Adam and Eve, Swedenborg does not repeat in the
^ Arcana Ccelestia.^ On the contrary, he assumes the existence
of a rudimental Human Race before Adam, but for how many
ages and in what numbers he says nothing. Of the condition
of this Pre- Adamite Bace he merely drops the remark, ^ that
• .
« ' Areana OcaUiiia,' No. 8,891.
328 MAS OF HIMSELF IS A BEAST.
^ they lived as Beasts.** How tw he would hare &Taared the
conclusions of Darwin^ LveU^ and Hoxlej we cannot know,
bat there is nothing in the ^Arcana Ccdesiid* to oppose them.
He writes —
^ 3Ian considered in himself is nothing bat a Beast ; he has
^ the same senses, i^ipetites, desires and affections in every
^respect. His good, jea even his bestafiections, he diares
^ with Animals: as for example, his love of wife, of children,
^ and of association with his species — in fact there is no real
^ difference between them. Man's peculiarity over animals —
^ a peculiarity they neither have, nor can have— connsts in the
* presence of the Lord in his Will and Understanding. It is
^ in consequence of this conjunction with the Lord, that llan
^ lives after death ; and although he should exist like a Beast,
^caring for nothing but himself and his relations, yet the
^ Lord's mercy is so great, being Divine and Lifinlte, that He
^ never leaves him, but continually breathes Into him His own
^llfc, whereby he is enabled to recognize what is good and
^ evil and true and false.
* Thus Man is only Man by virtue of what he derives from
* the Lord ; for there is but One Man and He is Jehovah.
* In the Most Ancient Church they called notliing Man but
^ the Lord alone ; and they reckoned each other men, just in
* so far as the Lord was present with them.'t
The complete identification of Humanity with God Is a
doctrine, which will come out into stronger relief as wc
proceed. In true Manhood Swedenborg saw nothing less
than the manifest Deity ; In the more of Manhood, the more
of God.
From this primitive stock — ^from Creatures kin to the
Beasts — the Church called Man, or Adam was gradually
evolved. The Days of Creation are but emblems of stages
• * Areana Codettia,' No. 286.
t * Arcana CoBUHia,' Nos. 7U, 1,894, 49.
THE ADAMIC CLANS. 829
in tho process whereby from an animal gromid a people were
developed into the image and likeness of God.
The Most Ancient Church inhabited the Land of Canaan.*
Of the years of its continuance and its population, Swedenborg
is silent. He describes them as a simple people, dwelling In
tents —
* It has been tt)ld me by the Angels that they were dis-
tinguished into Houses, Families and Tribes; a Home
consisting of the husband and wife, with their children and
domestic servants ; a Family, of a greater or lesser number
of Houses ; and a Tribe, of a smaller or larger number of
Families.
* The reason why they thus dwelt apart, divided into
Houses, Families and Tribes, was, that by this means the
Church might be conserved, and that all the Houses and
Families might be dependent on their Parent, and thereby
exist in love and true worship. It is to be remarked also,
that each House had a character distinct from every other ;
and to prevent a confusion of tempers and dispositions, and
to maintain the individuality of each Family intact, it pleased
the Lord, that they should thus abide in isolation. For the
same reason the Jewish Church was distinguished into Houses,
Families and Tribes, and each IsraeUte was required to
contract marriage within his own Family. The Kingdom
of Heaven is in like manner divided into innumerable Societies
according to the differences of love and faith among the
Angels.'t
For the possession of property these Most Ancient People
had no desire ; no one cared for what he could not use, or
sought to hoard what others might. Hence violence and rob-
bery were unknown. Their gentleness extended to Animals —
^ They never on any account, ate the flesh of beast or fowl,
• ' Arcana CceUitia,* NO0. 567, 8,686, 4,447, 4,454.
^ ' Arcana Ctdeatia,' Nos. 470-71 and 8,117-18.
330 facull ikterooursb.
^ but fed solely on gram, especially of bread made of wheat,
^ on fruits and herbs, milk, butter, etc To kill Animals and
^ eat their flesh was to them unlawful and r^arded as some-
* thing bestial.'*
Strange to tell, their intercourse was carried on, not so
much by words, as by facial morements, ^by innumerable
' variations of the countenance and the eyesf but chiefly of the
* lips ; for there are in the lips innumerable muscular fibres,
' which at this day are not brought into play. In this way
' they were able to communicate their ideas so perfectly, that
^ they could portray in a single minute what now takes an
^ hour to utter in words, and more fully and clearly than is
* possible by any language.
^ They were utterly averse to assuming looks at variance
^ with their thoughts. As they willed nothing but good they
^ had no desire to hide from each other their ends and intentions.
^ Simulation, and much more deceit, they considered an
^ atrocious crime ; and those, who were discovered expressing
^ by the face what was not in the heart were rejected firom
* society as Devils.' f
A curious reason is given for this pantomimic intercourse —
^ It will perhaps appear incredible, but the Man of the Most
' Andent Church had internal respiration^ and none perceptible
^ externally ; wherefore he dealt little in words. '|
Over such a mystery we can do nothing but listen to
Swedenborg. He writes —
^ The nature of the speech of the Most Ancient Church
^ was shewn me by a kind of influx I cannot describe. It
^ appeared, that it was not articulate, like the speech of our
^ time, but tacit, being produced, not by external respiration,
^ but by intemaL It was also given me to apperceive the
• * Arcana Oodlutia,* No. 1,002.
t * Amma (MuUa,* Nof. S07, l^llS, and 8,678.
t * Afmrn CUUtUa,' No. 607.
GOD^S WILL WAS ADAM'S WILL. 831
' nature of their internal respiration : it proceeded from the
' navel towards the heart, and thus through the lips, without
' anything sonorous ; and it did not enter the ear of another
^ hj an external way, and strike what is called the drum of
' the ear, but by a certain way within the mouth, and in fact
' by the passage called the Eustachian tube.'*
The Most Ancient Church had no written Word. Its
members spontaneously loved God and each other, and their
inclinations being then accordant with the Divine Will, they
had no need of external check or guidance. ^ The law was in
^ their inward parts and written in their hearts.' Moreover
^ the Lord appeared to them as a Man and conversed face to
*• face.' He likewise edified them by means of delightful
dreams and visions : and with Angels they had all the joy of
free association. The wisdom of these Ancients is by us
inconceivable : — ' It is scarcely possible at this day to acquire
^ a thousandth part of the knowledge they possessed.' They
knew and welcomed Truth the moment it was presented with-
out hesitation or debate ; in the same manner they had an
instantaneous perception of Falsehood, which they repelled
and abhorred, just as do the Angels. Their wondrous keenness
of intelligence was an effect of the indwelling of the Divine
Goodness in their hearts ; for Goodness, as has been observed,
has a sure and invincible affinity for Truth and as utter a
repugnance for Untruth: all Religions in one form or other
confess, that the one way to Eternal Light is through Bighte*
ousness and the one way to Eternal Darkness is through Sin.t
The interest felt by the people of the Most Ancient Church
in the Physical World as revealed to their Senses was measured
solely by its use as the continent and exponent of the Inner
World of Mind. As an anxious learner disregards the type
• * Arcana OxlesHa,' No. 1,118.
t * Arcana Ccdeetia,' No8. 49, 125, 597, 7S4, 895, 1,121, 2,896, 4,454, and
10,355.
832 ADAM SAW THBOUaH THE WORLD.
and words of a book in his paarion for ideas, so the Adamic
People were careless about things seen save tor their BTmboIism
of things nnseen. Sir Thomas Browne, referring to HobbeS|
says — ^ The severe school shall never laiigh me oat of the
' philosophy of Hermes — ^that this Visible World is a pictore
^ of the Invifflble, wherein, as in a portrait, things are not truly,
^ but in equivocal shapes, and as they counterfeit some real
^ substances in that Invisible Fabric'* With the Adamites this
was not a philosophy but a practice ; they did not discuss the
symbolism of Nature, for they saw through it Nature was an
open book in which they read the secrets of the Divine Wisdom
with equal ease and delight. Thus writes Swedenborg —
* When they gazed on a high Mountain, tiiey were im-
^ pressed with no idea of a Mountam, but with a sense of
^height; firom which they derived a perception of Heaven
' and the Lord : hence it came to pass, that the Lord was sud
' to dwell on high, and was called the Highest, and in later
^ times His worship was solemnized on high places. At
' Sunrise, they had no thought of the new day, but of the
^Lord's dawning in the Mind: hence He was called the
' Morning, the East, and the Day-spring. So likewise when
* they beheld a fruitful Tree, they gave little heed to the Tree,
' but saw in it the figure of a Man ; in the Fruit his Love and
* in the Leaves his Faith.'t
- Thus dwelling in the constant acknowledgement of the
Divine Presence it will excite no surprise to learn, that the
Most Ancient Church practised no ceremonial worship.} The
will of its members was the Lord's Will, and their wisdom His
Wisdom; their every thought and deed sprang from Him;
their existence was a perpetual song to His praise ; in them
He rested as in a finished work, and they in Him found their
* ' Seligio Medici.*
t ' Arcana CoekiHa,* Nos. 920, 1,122, and 1,409.
i * Aroana ChAuUa,' Nob. 4,493 and 10,895.
MAN IS MAN BECAUSE QOD IS MAN. 338
Sabbath. The purpose of rites of worship is to open and
revive the feeling of God, but where, as in their ease, that
feeling is habitual, rites are useless as candles in sunshine.
The Fall of the Church from this happy state began in pride
— pride the mother evil of human nature, the source of all its
sorrows.
It has been observed, that the Lord being the Only Man,
the Adamites regarded any manliness in themselves as the
shining of the Lord through them ; that the proportion of their
manhood was the proportion of the Divine manifestation ; that,
as there is no life but God, all must live firom Him; that
intrinsicallj we are void of life, and only come into being as
God communicates Himself to us ; and, that the Lord by the
gift of His presence raises an Animal into a Man, and by His
further entrance conforms him more and more to His own
image and likeness.
When these statements are first heard, they seem to nullify
human independence, and to reduce Humanity to a mere
vesture of Deity ; but ere that conclusion is admitted, Sweden-
borg intervenes with a most important consideration, whereby
he assumes to explain the mystery of the Fall and the Origin
of Evil.
He asserts, that with the communication of Himself to Man,
God communicates self-consciousness, rationality, liberty. As
we are Men because God is Man, so are we self-consdoos
because Qod is self-conscious, rational because He is rational,
free because He is free. God by the influx of His life bears
all these consequences into His subjects. He lives in Himself
of Himself, and in giving Himself to us. He gives us to fiel^
that we too live in ourselves of ourselves.
Thus he derives all Human Personality, Self-Consciousness,
Rationality and Liberty from the Divine —
^ Man has Rationality and Liberty from the Lord, and by
* virtue thereof enjoys the appearance of thinking, speaking,
^ willing and acting as from himself.
334 8BNSATI0N THE INYEBSION OF REMJTY.
^ The Lord rendes in those facoldes in eveiy Man caoang
* him to appear to think, speak, will and act as of himself.
^ ETeiy Angel has Liberty and Rationality ; bat they are
^ not his own but the Lord's in him. They appear to belong
^ to him, or to be luB own ; they give him the power to think
* and will, and to speak and act altogether as from himself.
* It is to be borne in mind, that both Liberty and Rationality
^ are not Man's but the Lord's in Man, and that they cannot
' be appropriated to Man as his own, nor given to Man as his
' own, but are continually the Lord's in him, and are never
* taken away from him.'*
Further he teaches, that in the degree the Lord is received
and manifested in His creatures, or in other words, as they rise
in the scale of being, in the same degree their feeling of
independence increases, and with it the distinct acknowledge-
ment, that the feeling of independence is an inversion of the
reality. None feel so free as the Celestial Angels, none enjoy
a more vivid sense of self-derived and exuberant life, yet none
Tcnow so well, that without the Lord they are nothing. Pride
is impossible and humility guaranteed in the light of this ever-
present knowledge.
Swedenborg under this doctrine presents to us the Man of
the Most Ancient Church confessing^ that all his virtue was
Divine, jet feeling^ that it was his own. The Lord's inde-
pendence was fell by Adam as his own, but instructed by
Revelation he knew the feeling was an illusion, and that he
owed his being at every instant to the presence of Grod.
The seduction of the Adamic Church from integrity began
in the preference of Sense to Revelation. Feeling^ that they
lived of themselves, they proceeded to confound sensation %vith
reality. In the pride of the persuasion of their independence,
degradation at once ensued, and from one error the Adamites
• * Divine Love and Wisdom; Nos. 116, 264, and 425, and 'Divine
'IVvvmImm,* Na97.
SENSATION PREFERRED TO REVELATION. 835
ran on to others until they reached the dreadful but logical
conclusion, that they were gods, that whatever they thought
was divine, and that beyond themselves there was no God.*
Such, teaches Swedcnborg, is the truth hidden under the
allegory of the expubion of Adam and Eve from Paradise.
The Serpent that beguiled Eve was Sensation ; Eve represents
Affection taken captive by the alluring promise, ^^ Ye shaU
'^ be as gods, knowing good and evil ;" and Adam is the type
of the Understanding, in turn seduced by Desire.
The degradation of the Most Ancient Church was not
sudden but gradual, and was effected in a long series of
generations. As in the case of all heresy it diffused itself
from a few to many, meeting with temporary but ineffectual
resistance from the faithful. Under the symbol of the murder
of Abel by Cain and the subsequent events and genealogies
the story of the Fall is pursued until the consummation is
reached in the Deluge, when it is said, *' God saw that the
^ wickedness of Man was great in the Earth, and that every
* imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil con-
^ tinually ; and it repented the Lord, that He had made Man
^ on the Earth, and it grieved Him at His heart ; and He said,
* * I wiD destroy Man whom I have created from the face of
' * the Earth.' '
Concerning the factitious character of the genealogies given
in Genesis between Adam and Noah, Swedeuborg observes —
^ It was customary with the Most Ancient People to cast
* Hbtory into the form of Genealogies ; for whatever has
^ relation to the Church may be considered in that light, since
* one faith is conceived and bom of another in a mode, which
' bears a close analogy to generation. Hence it is common in
* the Word to speak of developements in the Church under
^ the figures of conceptions, births, offspring, infants, children,
* * Arcana Calcttia,' No«. 502, 808, and 1,268.
336 THE ADAMITES CHOKED.
^ sons, daaghters, young men, etc The Prophets abound in
* such expressions.'*
In Cain, Abel, Enoch, Seth, Enos, Methuselah, Lamech,
he therefore asks us not to think of individuals, but of condi-
tions and pauses in the decline of the Adamic Church.
He describes the destruction of the degenerate Adamites
as a result of the derangement of their curious respiration —
^ Internal Respiration by degrees ceased, and with those
^ whose minds were a prey to direful phantasies, it became so
^changed, that they were no longer capable of expressing
^ any but the most deformed ideas.
^ It was shewn me, that the Internal Respiration, which
* proceeded from the navel towards the interior region of the
^ breast, retired towards the region of the back and towards
' the abdomen, thus outwards and downwards. Inmiediately
^ before the Flood scarce any Internal Respiration existed. At
' last it was annihilated in the breast, and its subjects were
^ choked or suffocated. In those who survived External Respi-
^ ration was opened.
^ With the cessation of Internal Respiration immediate
^ intercourse with Angels, and the instant and instinctive per-
* ception of Truth and Falsehood were lost't
Swedenborg tells us, he visited the Hells of the Antedilu-
vians who thus perished — ^ under safe guard and conduct so
^ that they could not do me the least harm.
* They are covered with a misty rock — an effect from their
^ direful phantasies and persuasions — and by it are separated
* from the rest of the Hells, and kept out of the World of
* Spirits. They are continually trying to escape, but are
^ withheld, for they are of such a character, that their influence
^ affects those they encounter with a stupor, which leaves them
* uncertain whether they are dead or alive. Unless the Lord
• 'Arcana CadeHia,' Nos. 339 and 3,240.
t ' Jreana GeU$tia,' Nos. 607 and 1,120.
DEVILISH ANTEDILUVIANS. 337
* by His coming into the flesh had freed the World of Spirits
*from the wicked Antediluvian Crew, Mankind must have
* perished ; for no Spirit could have remained with Man, and
'yet Man cannot live a single moment imless Spirits and
^ Angels be associated with him.
' Their highest delight is to hold one another in subjection,
* and as it were to murder. They are possessed with an un-
^ governable passion for destruction, and this is what makes
*• them bum to escape.
* When I approached the rock under which they are hid, I
* felt very cold in the lower part of my back. I talked with
^ them about their persuasions, and asked what they believed
^ concerning the Lord during their life on earth. They said,
^they had thought much about God, but came to the con-
^ elusion, that He had no existence, and that themselves were
^ gods ; and that they had confirmed themselves in such ideas
* by dreams.' *
Here are a few particulars about another set of the same
race —
* Some of those who survived the Flood were with me.
At first I felt their presence as gentle, but it was given me
to know, that they were inwardly wicked. They exhaled a
sphere like that of a corpse, so tliat the Spirits who were
with me fled away. They thought themselves so subtle,
that no one could perceive what they thought. I discoursed
with them about the Lord, asking them whether they ex-
pected Him as their fathers did. They replied, that they
represented the Lord to themselves as an old man with
a grey beard who was holy, and that by connection with
Him they should become holy and bearded likewise. Hence
arose the superstitious notions about beards, which prevailed
amongst their posterity. An Angel approaching at this
* Arrana CfdetUa,' Nan. 311 and 1.265-72.
Z
338 GOOD ANTEDILUVIANS.
' moment, they were unable to endure his presence, and they
* passed away.' *
(>f some of the better sort he says —
* 1 have conversed with the tliird generation of the Most
* Ancient Church. They said, that during their abode in the
' world, tli(»y expected the Lord to come and save the whole
^ Human Race ; and that it was a proverb among them, that
' the Seed of the Woman should trample on the Serpent's
* Head. For tliis reason, it was their chiefest joy to have
* children : they loved their married partners for the sake of
^ ofispring, and set the pleasures of wedlock above all others.
^ I was permitted to see the habitations in Heaven of those
' who belonged to the second and third posterity of tliis Most
' Ancient Church. They are very magnificent, extending to
^ a great length, and variegated with beautiful colours, sudi as
* purple and blue.' t
In tlic early days of the Most Ancient Church its members
were removed to Heaven, preserving intact the relationships
of Earth—
' 1 have been informed by the Angels, that those who lived
' in the most ancient times, live at this day in the Heavens, in
' sepai'atc Houses, Families and Nations, as they had lived on
* Earth, and that scai'ce any one of a House is wanting.'}
Tlie Ancient Chirch.
The Deluge was not a flood of waters, but the climax of
that infernal delusion whereby the Serpent seduced Eve and
Kvo Adam ; nor was the havoc of the Flood universal, but
confined strictly to that portion of the race which composed
the Most Ancient Chiu'ch. It is true that in Genesis the
IMuge is described as * destroying every living tiling whidi
* 'Arcana <WtWm,' No. 1,124.
t 'Arcaiia CteleMin,' Nos. 1,123 and 1,110.
t * />€ A^nore Conjuijiuli,^ No. 205.
THE ANCIENT CnURCli; 339
* waa upon the face of the ground, both men and cattle,
* creeping things and fowl of heaven/ but says Swedenborg,
* the Earth does ii»)t there mean the whole habitable globe, but
' only those who were of the Church.'*
Li the course of the decline of the ilost Ancient Church
provision was made for the institution of a new Church. The
Adamites in their prime had no systematic theology ; seeing
in Humanity and in Nature the Divine Manifestation, they
had no need to register truth in documents; but as with
the loss of innocence, their instant and instinctive perception
of truth became impaired, some attempted to replace im-
mediate revelation by the memory of what had been 8een.'\
' The first w^ho thus transferred tnith from perception to
' record was the generation of Cain ; afterwanis what Cain
' collected was reduced to doctrine by Enoch ; but as the
* doctrine was of no use at that time, and was only intended
* for posterity, therefore it is written, ' Plnoch was not, for
' ' God took him.' 'J By means of Cain and Enoch a series
of Sacred Scriptures were provided for the use of the futiu'e
Church.
These Scriptures are described by Swedenborg as forming
an Ancient Word consisting of History and Prophecies. The
History was called * The ^Var8 of Je/wvahj* and the Prophecies
' The Enunciations.^ Our Author writes —
' Concerning this Ancient Word, which existed in Asia
' before the Israelitish Word, it is worth while to mention.
* 'Arcana ('(clejttia,' No. CO'i.
t ' It is a ven* difTerent tiling to know what is pood and true by Percep-
' tion. and to luarn it by means of Doctrine. They wlio know by Perception
' are in no need <»f the knowledge acquired in tlie way of BVBtematized Doc-
' trines, any more than he who can think correctly has occasion to be taught
* by the niles of art, by which indeed his thinking faculty would be impaired,
' like that of those who obscure their intellect with the dust of the Schools.' —
'Arcanrt fWlfstia,' No. 621.
i 'Arcana C/rleMia/ No. 000.
z 2
840 PBiMrrivE scriptures.
that it is Btill preserved among the inhabitants of Great
Tartary. I have conversed with Spirits and Angels, who
came from Tartary, who said they possess a Word, and
have possessed it from Ancient Times ; that their worship is
governed by it, and that it consists of mere correspondences :
they said, that it contains * The Booh of Jasher^^* and ' The
* Wars of Jehovah^ and * The Enunciations^ \ When I read
to them the words quoted from thence by Moses, they
examined whether they were extant in their Word, and
they found them : from which circumstance it is very clear
to me, that the Old Word is still in existence amongst them.
In the course of the conversation, they said that they wor-
ship Jehovah ; some as an invisible, and some as a visible
GU)d. Moreover, they relate, that they do not suflFer foreigners
to come among them, except the Chinese, with whom they
cultivate peace, because the Emperor of China is from their
country; and further, that they are so populous, that they
do not believe any country in the world is more so ; which is
very credible, from the wall so many miles long, which the
Chinese formerly built as a defence against their invasions.
^ Seek for the Ancient Word in China, and peradventure
* you may find it there among the Tartars.' J
* Mentioned in Joshua z. 12, 13, and 2 Samuel i. 17, 18.
t Mentioned by Moses in Numbers zzi. 14, 15, and 27-30.
X 'Apocalypse Revealed^* No. 11 ; * Sacred Scripture^* Nos. 101-103; and
•Arcana GeUttia,' Nos. 2,686 and 2,894-2,898.
This curious statement he repeats in the last work he published, the
•Vera Chrittiana HeUffiOj* in 1772, saying —
* I am at liberty to state, that the Ancient Word which was in Asia before
' the Israelitish Word is still preserred among the people of Great Tartary.
* I have been further informed by the Angels that the first chapters of
' Genesis, which treat of the Creation, of Adam and Eve, of the Garden of
* Eden, and of their children and posterity to the Flood, are contained in that
' Word, and were copied from it by Moses.
'Th« Angels likewise said, that that Word is itill preserred in Heaveii,
THE PEOPLE CALLED NOAH* 341
The Inheritors of these primeval Scriptures, and their
bearers to the outlying World were the small remnant of the
Most Ancient Church which escaped the Deluge, and were
described as Noah. Their character and fewness were thus
depicted to Swedenborg —
^ There appeared to me a narrow confined apartment, and,
^ the door being opened, there was presented a tall and slender
^ man, clothed in garments of intense whiteness. I wondered
^ who he was, till I was informed, that a man clothed in white
* signified those who were called Noah, and who were the seed
* of the Ancient Church — the Church after the Flood. They
* were thus represented because they were few.' *
By Noah the light of the Church was diflfused * far and
* wide around the land of Canaan ' t among the Grentiles — the
same animal or bestial stock out of which the Adamic Church
had been created ; for, it is to be carefully noted, that Adam
was only a fraction of the Human Race. Swedenborg lays
down the principle, that —
* When a new Church is established by the Lord, seldom,
^ if ever, is it constituted amongst those, who formed the old
* Church : it is transferred to the Gentiles.
' Such was the case when the Most Ancient Church
* perished; the Ancient Church was then raised up among
^ the Gentiles, amongst those who had heretofore been in no
* Church.' t
There never existed such persons as Noah, Shem, Ham,
Japheth, and Canaan. These names we are merely to regard
* and id in uso among the Anoiento there, who were in poMesaion of it daring
' their ahode on earth.* No. 279.
Among Swedenborg*! disciples I have never heard of any disposed to
trust him so fiir as to go exploring under his adyice, * Seek for the Andent
* Word in China, and peradrenture you may find it there among the Tartars.'
• 'Arcana CoeUiHa,' Nos. 788, 1,125; see also 407, 468, 580, and 1,140.
t 'Arcana OoeiegHa,* No. 1,140. t 'Arcama CkduAa,' No. 2,896.
342 THE CUUBCH CALLED NOAH.
as personifications of spiritual conditions in the Ancient
Church, which, in common with every other Church, con-
tained meiubers —
In true Internal Worship signified by Shem,
In corrupt Internal Worship signified by Ham,
In true External Worship signified by Japheth, and
In corrupt External Worship signified by Canaan.
By Noah nothing else was meant, than the Ancient Church in
general, comprehending, as a parent, all the rest. *
From the Noachian centre in Canaan the Ancient Church
spread over ^Assyria, Mesopotamia, Syria, Ethiopia, Arabia,
* Lybia, Egypt, Philisthea, even to Tyre and Sidon, through
^ the whole land of Canaan, on each side of the Jordau/f I^^
area thus greatly exceeded that of the Adamic Church.
The people of the Ancient Church were of a genius
altogether diverse from that of the Most Ancient. The
peculiarity of Adam was, that his Will was superior to his
Intellect, that his Understanding was the instrument of his
Affections, that his Love gave the impulse which his Wisdom
passively carried into effect. As long as his Heart beat in
harmony with the Divine Will this state was the perfection of
bliss, but when Pride betrayed Adam his destruction became
inevitable ; for his Understanding being subject to his Will
and the mere executor of its Rotates, there was no means
whereby resistance to Evil could be offered. AVhen our
Feelings go astray we are corrected by Intelligence, when
our Understanding is at fault our Heart sometimes proves
wiser than our Head; but in Adam Heart and Head were
in«<»parably united, and hurried irretrievably to a common
perdition. {
* 'Arcana CoeUitia,* Nos. 1,140 and 1,238.
t Arcana OoeUstia,' No«». 1,238 and 2,385.
t 'Arcami f.kehitia,' N.». '.>27.
THE ANCIENT CHURCHES. 343
To prevent a repetition of this catastrophe, *the Lord
* ordained, that the Human Will should be separated from the
* Intellect,' so that henceforth truth received from without by
the Understanding might effect tlie redemption of refractory
and vicious Affections. The Divine promise made after the
Deluge, "I will not again curse the ground any more for'
" Man's sake, neither will I again smite any more every living
" thing, as I have done," is interpreted by Swedenborg into
a consequence of this separation of Thought from Impulse.
In illustration of the present independence of the Will and the
Understanding he cites his own experience —
' Nothing can possibly be more distinct than these two
* parts. This I was enabled to perceive clearly by the Intelli-
* gence of iVngels and Spirits entering by influx into the left
' side of the Head or Brain, and their Will into the right
' side : the same division extends to the left and right fiide« of
' the Face. Wlien Good Spirits enter, they flow softly and
' sweetly like the most refreshing aura ; when Evil Spirits
' enter, they rush as a turbulent flood, their phantasies and
' direful persuasions passing into the left side of the Brain, and
' their lusts into the right.' *
The Ancient Church extending over so many kingdoms
embraced many races who entertained neither a uniform creed
nor practised a uniform worship. Love to God and Man was
in their eyes the sum of religion, and differences of opinion
and varieties of ceremonial were held as of no account.
* The Doctrine of Charity was the doctrine which prevailed
' in the Ancient Churches, and that doctrine conjoined them
• * Arcana Ccdestia^^ No. 641. Swedenborg in his ascription of the right
side of tho Brain to tho Will and of tho left to the Understanding, is at
singular variance with tho facts of Science. Those who least respect tho
teachings of Phrenology yet willingly concede, that the Forehead is the seat
of Intelligence and the crown and back of the Head are the region of the
Will and its Affections.
344 8TMB0LI8M AMONG THE ANCIKHTS.
all and out of Beveral made one ; for ihey admowledged aa
Churchmen ail who lived in the good of charity and called
them brethren, howsoever thej mi^t differ aa to troths.
^ In the tratha of £uth one instmcted the other, which
instmction thej reckoned amongst their works of charity;
neither were they indignant if one did not accede to the
opinion of another, for they knew that one can only receive
sach tmth as is in correspondence with his goodness.
^ Such being the character of the Andent Churches, the
members thereof were interior men, and in consequence of
being interior they were wise ; for they who are in diarity
abide as to their minds in Heaven, in assodation with Angels
of kindred spirit, and are wise, as Angels are wise, from the
Divine Presence.
^ The case is altogether otherwise with those who are prin-
dpled in mere doctrinals, and not in charity. These dispute on
every subject, and condemn all without distinction whose senti-
ments, or as they term it beliefs do not accord with their own.'*
The inferiority of the Andent to the Most Ancient Church
was in nothing more apparent than in the manner in which
they were affected by the External World. To the Most
Ancient Church every object revealed its ori^ proximately
in Mind, and essentially in Deity. Of this quick and instinctive
perception of causes within appearances the Andent Church
was destitute ; but its members were not therefore ignorant or
careless of the symbolism of Nature ; quite the reverse was
their case. The Outer World did not indeed discover to them
at a glance the secret of its being, but from the traditions
collected by Enoch and his associates, they learned the relation
of the seen to the unseen, and their chief intellectual delight
was to pursue into their ramifications the correspondences
existing between Grod and Mind and Matter.
• *Artana CodaUia,' Nos. 6,628, 29.
GLORY OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH. 345
^ The knowledge of correBpondencea was held In the highest
^ esteem by the Ancients, and was styled the science of sciences.
^ All their treatises were written according to its rules. The
^ Book of Job, which was a book of the Ancient Church, is
* full of correspondences. The hieroglyphics of the Egyptians
^ and the oldest fables of the Greeks are nothing but corres-
^ pondences set in series. The science of the Ancients was
^ thus altogether different from the later developements of
^ thought called philosophy. Such systems as Aristotle^s were
^ altogether foreign and unknown to the Ancients.' *
^The Ancients knew what was signified by animab and
^ trees of every kind, what by mountains and hills, springs and
^ rivers, what by the sim, moon, and stars. In accordance with
^ the spirit and purpose of their devotion they resorted to
' mountains and hiUs, groves and gardens, to perform their
^ worship. For the same reason they consecrated fountainS|
^ turned their faces to the East in prayer, and placed images
^ of horses, oxen, lambs, fishes, and serpents, in their streets,
^ houses, and temples, that they might recall to their memories
^ the sacred things they signified.' t
Luxuriating in this symbolism, and blest in abounding
charity, the glory of the Ancient Church is variously described
in the Scriptures. Its essential unity, beneath superficial
differences of ritual and opinion, is expressed in the assertion^
^ The whole earth was of one language and of one speech.'
Ezekiel speaks of the Church of Tyre, * Thou Eling of Tyrus
^ sealest up the sum, ftill of wisdom and perfect in beauty*
* Thou hast been in Eden, the garden of God ; every precious
^ stone was thy covering ; thou wast upon the holy mountain
* * Arcana Ckdutia,' Nob. 2,7S2, 8,021, 4,280, 4,966, 7,729, and 10,856.
' Vera CfhrMana BeUgio,* No. 201.
t * Arcana Calestia,* Nos. 4,288 and 4,904. ' Vera ChritHana BeUgio,*
Nos. 205, 275, 291, and 838. * Dimna Frtrndeniia,' No. 255.
346 FALL OF THE ANCIENT CHUBCH.
^ of Gh>d; thou hast walked np and down in llie midst of the
' stones of fire; thou wast perfect in thy ways from the day
^ thou wast created, till iniquity was found in thee ;' and again
the same IVophet describes the great Church of Assyria,
^ Behold, the Assyrian was a oedar in Lebanon with fair
'branches and of high stature. The waters made him great,
' the deep set him upon high with her rivers running round
' about his plants. All the fowls of heaven made their nests
^in his boughs, under his branches did all the beasts of the
' field bring forth their young, and under his shadow dwelt all
' great nations. The cedars in the garden of God could not
'hide him: the fir trees were not like his boughs, and the
' chesnut trees were not like his branches, nor any tree in the
'garden of Grod was like unto him in his beauty ; and all the
'trees of Eden envied him.'*
The decline of the Ancient Church began in the growth
of self-love over neighbourly love, and of worldly care and
the lust of the flesh over delight in divine and heavenly things.
The process of degradation is summarily related in Genesis
under the allegory of a retreat fi*om the East,t a settlement in
the valley of Shinar, the building of the Tower of Babel with
brick and slime, the confusion of tongues and the dispersion
of the builders. The Babylonish love of power sundered the
brotherhood of the Churches, subordinated the well-being of
the many to the pride of a few, transformed peaceful patri-
archal communities into aristocracies and monarchies,! and
finally into gigantic empires for the double purpose of aggres-
sion and defence.
• Oeneiis xi. 1, xui. 10 ; Ezekid xxviii. 12 to 15, xxxi. 8 to 9. 8weden-
borg'8 'Corcmw/ No. 41.
t * The Lord, in the Bupremo sense, is the East beoanso He is the Sun of
* Heaven.'— *^lrcana Coeleatia,' Nos. 101, 6,097 and 9,668.
♦ * Arcana Ordeitia,' Nos. 7,364 and 10,814; 'Vera Christiana Beligio,'
No. 9.
HELLS OF THE ANCIENTS. 347
With the loss of lovo the Churches gradually lost their
intelligence ; stupidity kept pace with selfishness. Their Scrip-
tures were neglected and then disappeared, and their know-
ledge of correspondences degenerated into superstition and
dolatry, and in the Egyptian Church the science of the con-
nection of the spiritual with the natural world was perverted
into magical arts.
' Symbols and images they began to regard as divine and
holy, not knowing that their ancestors saw nothing sacred in
them. To some they bowed the knee, some they kissed,
some they decorated with flowers and ribbons as children do
dolls and Papists saints ; of some they made household gods,
of some tutelar demigods, and of some pythons ; some again
of small size they carried in their hands ; some they hugged
in their bosoms, caressed and whispered petitions to. llius
they converted heavenly types into infernal, and the divine
things of Heaven and the Church into idols.
* In this manner arose the idolatries which filled the whole
earth, as well Asia with its adjacent islands, as Africa and
Europe.*
* The vastation and consmnmation of the Ancient Churches
are described throughout the Word both in the historic and
prophetic parts; the consummation of the Church round about
Jordan is described in the destruction of Sodom and Go-
morrah ; that of the Church of Canaan in the slaughter of the
Canaanites by the Israelites; and that of the Church of Egypt
by the drowning of Pharaoh and his host in the Red Sea.'f
* * CoronU,* No. 43, and 'Divina Providentia,* No. 255. It is difficult to
reconcile this statement with the fact that fetish worship prevails wherever man
is a savapre, and we can scarcely suppose that the ahorigines of Australasia
were idolaters by the perversion of the symbolism of the Ancient Church.
I can find nothing in Swedenborg which gives any hint as to the existence or
non-existence of any rudimentary notion of religion among the animal stock
out of which boUi the Adamic and the Ancient Churches were constituted.
t 'Coronis: No. 41.
348 THE JEWISH CHURCH.
Some of the Heavens and Hells of the Andent Chorch
were visited by Swedenborg.
^ The Hells for the most part consist of magicians, who
^ have huts and homes of entertainment scattered up and down
^ a desert. They wander about with staves of various forms
^ in their hands, some of which are stained with necromantic
^juices ; by them they exercise the arts they practised on earth
^ by the abuse of correspondences, by phantasies, by persuasive
^assurances which produce miraculous faith and works, and
^ also by exorcism, incantation, fascination and sorcery, and
* several other infernal contrivances, whereby they present
^illusory appearances as if they were real. Their hearts*
^ greatest delight is to utter prophecies and prognostications,
^ and to be resorted to as Familiar Spirits. These Satans have
^been the origin of various enthusiasms in the Christian
^ World.'*
The Jewish Church.
We now come to the beginning of the Mosaic Scriptures
and exchange allegory for history, but it is doubtful whether
the surprise excited by Swedenborg's interpretation of the
early chapters of Genesis will not be exceeded by his doctrine
concerning the character and mission of the Jews ' chosen by
^ Jehovah for a holy people unto Himself above all the nations
* on the face of the earth.' Swedcnborg's testimony in many
of its parts is not peculiar ; similar opinions might easily be
drawn from theologians and critics ; but his theory in its en-
tirety, in its comprehensive sweep and application will, I think,
be confessed original.
Abraham he derives from a degenerate stock of the An-
cient Church called Heber, existing in Syria, Mesopotamia,
and among some nations of Canaan, who worshipped GU>d
Schaddai and practised animal sacrifice (a practice unknown
• 'ArooMa Cakttia,' No«. G,692 and 9,193; 'Corovut,* Nofi. 41 to 45.
ABRAHAM CALLED FROM IDOLATRY. 349
and nndreamt of by the wiser Ancients) regarding burnt
offerings as the most sacred and essential of rites. The
immediate ancestors of Abraham had declined to idolatry as
appears from the farewell speech of Joshua to Israel — ' Thus
* saith Jehovah God of Israel, " Your fathers dwelt on the
* " other side of the flood [Jordan] in old time, even Terah,
* " the father of Abraham, and the father of Nachor : and they
* " served other gods. . . . Now, therefore, fear Jehovah, and
* " serve Him in sincerity and in truth ; and put away the gods
* " tchich your fathers served on the other side of theflood^ and
* " in Egypt; and serve ye Jehovah." '* Abraham was led
from the idolatry of his father^s house into Canaan and intro-
duced to the worship of one God, not as Jehovah, but as
Schaddai ; for as related in Exodus — ' God spake unto Moses,
' and said unto him, '^ I am Jehovah ; and I appeared unto
^ '' Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob as God Schaddai,
* " but by my name Jehovah was I not known unto them." ' f
In Abraham the Jewish Church began, but its superficial
life was extinguished during the captivity in Egypt when the
Israelites lost all knowledge of representative worship and
shared in the idolatry of the Egyptians. Under Moses they
were led out of the land of bondage, taught the name of
Jehovah, and initiated into a complex legal and ceremonial
life. The Bible narrative from Abraham, Swedenborg accepts
literally, raising no questions as to its matter of fact accuracy
while asserting that every sentence, yea every letter and iota,
is alive with spiritual and divine meaning. Nevertheless
where he feels a difficulty he is seldom at a loss for an ex-
planation, and had he had a Bishop Colcnso to answer, there is
no telling what concessions he might have made; for instance,
in the case of the ass expostulating with Balaam, he writes —
^ It sounded in the ears of Balaam as if the ass spoke to
• '/ofAua/ zxiy., 2, 14, 15. f ' ExoduB,' ti. 2, 8.
350 MIRACLES, HOW WROUGHT.
' him, notwithstanding the ass did not speak, but the speech
^ was heard as if proceeding from her. This I have ascer-
* tained by lively experience ; it has been given me to hear as
^ if it were horses speaking, when nevertheless the speech was
* not from them, but as if it were fix)m them.' ♦
Again, Joshua's command, ^^ Sun, stand thou still upon
^^ Gibeon, and thou. Moon in the valley of Ajalon" he gets
over thus —
^ What is said in ^^ cTo^Aimi," that the Sun stood still upon
^ Gibeon and the Moon in the valley of Ajalon appears as if
' historical, but it is prophetic, being quoted from the '' Book
^^^of Jasher^^ which was a prophetic book ; for it is said, " Is
* " not this written in the * Booh ofJasherV "
^ The same may also appear from the circumstance, that
^ this miracle, if it had been actually accomplishe-d, would have
* inverted the whole order of Nature, which is not the case
* with the rest of the miracles recorded in the Word.' f
The miracles wrought by the Egyptian sorcerers in rivalry
with Moses are admitted by Swedenborg to have been real
prodigies eflFected by abuse of the ancient Science of Corres-
pondences. Magical arts were carried to great perfection
in Egypt, and the deepest magical Hells are formed of
Egyptians. \
Jacob was the father of the Jews, and in Jacob's character
Swedenborg finds the type of his posterity. In his vow at
Bethel, ' If God will be with me, and ^vill keep me iu this
* ' Xumheri' xxii. 33; * Apoccdypais ExpUcatOf* No. 140.
t * Joshua,* X. 12, 14 ; *Apocaltfpns Bevdata^* No. 63, and *Apocal»fpn$
* Erplicata,* No. 401 . Swedenborg here forgets the retreat of the shadow
ten degrees backwartl on the dial of Ahaz. 2 * Kings,* xx. 8, 11; '/«<iiaA/
xxxviii. 7. 8.
t • ArcatM CrrltsHa; Xo. 6,692.
JEWISH QKEED AND IGNORANCE. 351
' way that I go, and will give mo bread to eat, and raiment to
' put on, 80 that I come again to my father's house in peace,
' then shall Jehovah be my God, and of all that He shall give
' me I will surely give the tenth unto Him' — he discovers the
mercenary piety of the whole Jewish race.* In the sub-
sequent history of Israel he sees nothing, but selfish Jacob
over and over again ; and through the whole course of the
* Arcatia Coelestia^^ he pursues the Jews with one whip of
epithets as the basest of mankind. I cannot tiiist myself to
re-produce his opinions and shall therefore in a short series
of extracts endeavour to give an abstract of the multitude of
his testimonies concerning the ignorance and depravity of the
chosen people.
Their Worship of Jehovah,
* The Israelites were kept some hundreds of years in Egjrpt
' where they were reduced to such ignorance, that they lost
' the knowledge of the very name of Jehovah, f
* When they did acknowledge Jehovah it was no otherwise
' than as another god by whom they might be distinguished
' from the Gentiles and become great and pre-eminent over
' surrounding nations.
^ With the mouth the Jews confessed one God, but they
* did not 80 own Ilim in their hearts. More than the Gentiles,
' they believed in many gods, but considered Jehovah the
' greatest, because He could work greater miracles ; wherefore
' as soon as miracles ceased, or became of little account through
' frequency and familiarity, tliey instantly resorted to idols.
' Headed by Aaron, and within a month of the wonders on
' Sinai, they were worshipping a golden calf.
* 'Genesis,' xxviii., 19 to 22; 'Arcana Ccflestia,' No8. 3,667, 3,732, and
10,559.
t 'Exodus,' iii., 12 to 14; 'Arcana Ccflestia,' No. 4.289- Which name,
uddly enough, had never been revealed to them ! See preceding page, 349.
852 JEWISH DASKKESS.
^ They worshipped Jehovah merely for the sake of miracles^
and not because He was the only Grod ; and he who worships
Grod for the sake of miracles alone, worships a name, and not
Gh>d, and falls away from worship as often as he does not
enjoy what he desires.
^ Thus even their worship of Jehovah was idolatrous ; for
the worship of a name only, admitting it to be the name of
Jehovah, is nothing else but sheer idolatry. The case is the
same with those who call themselves Christians, and say they
worship Christ, but do not live according to His precepts.
^ The reason why it is said of Moses, that ^^ Jehovah spake
'^ unto him face to face, as a man speaketh unto his friend,"'
is because He appeared to him in human form adapted to the
condition of Moses, which was extemaL I have been in-
formed by the Angels, that Moses saw Jehovah as an aged
and bearded man sitting with him. Hence also the Jews
had no other idea of Jehovah than as of a very old man with
a beard as white as snow, who could do miracles above other
gods ; but not that He was most holy, for they had no notion
of what holiness was.* *
Their Spiritual Ignorance.
' The Jews were m plenary ignorance of spiritual things.
* They were rooted in no truth of faith. Of the Lord and His
* Kingdom and of life after death they knew actually nothing.
^ Whilst in external worship and in the strict observance
^ of rituals, they were so ignorant of everything internal as to
* suppose, that there was no life beyond the body. The nature
' of the soul, of faith in the Lord, of things spiritual and celes-
^ tial, and of the ftiture life was utterly unknown to them.
^ When man is of such a character as to recognize no life
• 'Arcam OotUtiia,* Nob. 4,208, 4,311, 7,401, 4,847, 4,6d2, 10,566 and
4,t90.
JEWISH AVABIOE. 353
except the preseut, ho must needs discredit the existence of
internal, spiritual and celestial principles. Such are all thoso
who like the Jews live inimci-sed in the lusts of the flesh and
the world, and especially in filthy avarice. They may fre-
quent synagogues and churches, and observe established fonna
with extreme accuracy, but inasmuch as they have no belief
in a life after death, their worship can be nothing but external
like a shell without a kernel, or a tree without fruit, or even
leaves.
' Whatever may be the acuteness, or the scientific reputation
of the Jew, he can have no concern about internal things,
because his quality is such, that he believes nothing exists
but what he sees with his eyes and feels with his touch ;
consequently there is to him neither Heaven nor Hell. If
he were told, that innnediately after death he will enter into
another life in which he will see, hear, speak and touch, with
a perfection impossible in the body, he would reject the
information as a paradox or phantasy.^*
Their Avarice.
' The Jews are the most avaricious of nations, and avarice
like theirs, which prizes gold and silver, not for the sake of
use but for the mere lust of possession, is an affection the
most earthly, and di*aws the mind altogether uito the body
and immerses it therein, and closes the interior faculties to
such a degree, that it is impossible for anything of the faith
or love of Heaven to enter. Hence it is evident how much
they are mistaken, who think the Church will again pass to
Israel. It would be an easier matter to convert stones than
Jews to faith in the Lord.
' In Jewish avarice is not only love of the world, but also
* self-love, and indeed the most filthy self-love ; for with the
* 'Arruiui Cickstia,' No». 3,373, 10,500. 1,200, and 4,464.
2 A
354 JEMIAU AYABICE AND PRIBE.
^ flordidl J aTaricions, money is not loved for ostentation nor for
' Inxmy. It is a love altogether earthly^ having nothing for
^ ita end bat money, wherein it feela itself to be above all others,
' not in act hut in ability. Sach avarice b the lowest and vilest
' form of self-love, and contrary to all goodne^ whatsoever.
^ Hence they are in such thick darkness that they cannot by
^ any means see what is good and tme or comprehend how life
' is possible after the death of the body, and in heart deride
^ those who look for immortalitv. The Jews have been in
* this case from the beginning, and therefore no spiritual truth
* was revealed to them, as is evident from the Old Testament.'*
Their Pride and Cruelty.
* The Israelites whilst outwardly holy were inwardly filthy
and defiled, full of self-love and love of the world, thus of
contempt, hatred, malice, envy, avarice, rapine and the like.
* The Hells are nothing but self-love and love of the world,
and these have been the loves of the Jews from the earliest
times ; and, as a consequence, they regarded all other nations
as vile and as of no account whatever beside themselves.
Hence the Lord said to them, " Ye arc of yoiu: father the
" Devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do."
^ This contempt for others exists in the Jews at this day,
but as they lead a precarious life in the lands of strangers
they hide it deep within themselves.
^ What was the nature of the lusts and phantasies of the
Jews no one can know, who has not had some conversation
with them in the other life; and this was granted me in
order that I might learn. In the Spiritual World I have
occasionally discoursed with them. They love themselves
and worldly wealth more than any people ; and moreover
supremely dread the loss of self-honour and of gain. Ac-
« 'Areana Oudutia* Nor. 4,293, 4,459, 8,801, and 4,750-51.
JEWISH CRUELTY. «?55
cordingly, at this day as of old, they despise others in com-
parison with themselves, and by the most intense assiduity
acquire money ; besides, they are timid.
* The Israelites more than any people were of such a
nature, that as soon as they observed anything unfriendly,
even amongst those to whom they were allied, they believed
it lawful to treat them cruelly, and not only to kill themy
but to expose their bodies to birds and beasts. . • • There-
fore they could not believe otherwise, than that Jehovah
entertained hatred, and was angry, wrathful and furious.
This is the reason why in the Word, Jehovah is so de-
scribed; for according to man's quality, so the Lord appears
to him.
* The Jews were so cruel and such beasts, that they per-
ceived delight after slaying their enemies in battle to leave
them unburied to be devoured by birds and beasts.
^ I once saw a large mortar, and standing by it a man
with an iron pestle, who from phantasy seemed to himself to
be pounding men in it, and torturing them in a dreadful
manner. This he did with great delight : the deUght was
communicated to me, that I might know its quality and
quantity ; it was an infernal delight. The Angels told me,
that such was the ruling delight of the posterity of Jacob,
and that they perceived nothing more delightful than to treat
the nations with cruelty, to expose them when slain to be
devoured by wild beasts and birds, to cut them alive with
saws and axes, to send them through the brick-kiln,* and to
dash their children to the ground.'f
♦ * And David gathered all the people together, and went to lUbhah, and
' fonght against it, and took it. And he brought forth the people that were
' therein, and put them under saws, and under harrows of iron, and under
* axes of iron, and made them pass through the brick-kiln: and thus he did
' unto all the cities of the children of Ammon. So David and all the people
' returned unto Jerusalem.'* — 2 ^Samael^* xii. 29 — 31.
t 'Arcana Ccdetih,' Nos. 10,429, 4,293, 3,605, 908 and 5.057.
0 4^
mm tX. ^
356 thb; jbws not chosen.
In what sense the Jews were chosen.
The astonished reader will be ready to inquire, On what
principle does Swedenborg account for the choice by Jehovah
of ' this worst of nations' for His Church?
In the first place he denies, that they were chosen —
* They were not elected, but only accepted to represent
* Heaven and the Church.
' The posterity of Jacob were urgent to represent the
Church, and, because of their urgency, were received, but
not chosen.
* Who at this day does not believe that the Church existed
in the Jewish nation, yea, that the Jews were chosen and:
loved above all peoples? and this chiefly because so many
miracles were wrought among them, because so many pro-
phets were sent to them, and because they had the Word.
Yet the Israelites had in them nothing of the Church, for
tliere was among them no charity, nor indeed did they know
what true charity was. They were also void of faith in tho
Lord ; they knew that He was to come, but they supposed .
that He would raise them above all the universe ; and because
tliis was not done, they altogether rejected Him, being un-
willing to know anything of His Heavenly Kingdom.
* He who is ignorant, that interior things constitute tlio
Church, and not exterior things without interior, caimot
know otherwise than that the Jews were chosen and also
loved by Jehovah more than all other nations, hut the case
was altogether otherwise; tliey were received because they
pressed to be received.
' Every one who thinks somewhat more deeply than com-
mon may know, that by the seed of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, which the Word so frequently testifies should bo
blessed above all nations and peoples, is not meant the Jews ;
for compared with other races, they were least of all endowed
with the love of God luid the neighbour.
THE USE MADE OF THE JEWS. 857
* They who know nothing concerning the internal sense of
* the Word cannot believe otherwise than that the Jews were
* elected in preference to other nations, even as the Jews
* themselves believed ; also, from many promises in the Word,
* that they will be again elected and restored to Canaan. But
' the Word has a spiritual sense, and in that sense by Israel is
* not meant Israel, nor by Jacob Jacob, nor by Judah Judah,
^ but by those persons are understood the principles, which they
* represent. The Jews themselves were the wickedest and
* vilest of nations and will never be restored to Canaan.'*
TJie Jexcs as Representatives ,
The Ancient Church had passed away into idolatry, and as
the material for a Heal Church had perished from the world,
a Keprescntative Church was raised up as a substitute. For
this office the Jews had unique qualifications.
* By reason of their very lusts the Jews were capable above
* all other nations of being held in holy externals w^hilst utterly
* destitute of holy internals. This appears from what is told
* of them in the Word. iVfter punishment they could exhibit
* a degree of outward humiliation impossible to any other
* people ; for they could He prostrate on the ground for whole
' days, roll in the dust, mourn for days together, going in
* sackcloth and tattered ganiicnts with ashes sprinkled on their
* heads, fasting without intennission, and bursting into bitter
* weeping. This all the w hile was merely the effect of bodily
' and earthly love, and the fear of losuig pre-eminence and
' wealth. Nothing internal affected them, for they knew not,
* neither were they willing to know any thing internal, such
* as, that there is a life after death and eternal salvation.
* More than any people in the universal orb of earths the
* Jews could fast, lie on the earth, roll in ashes, and mourn for
♦ 'Arcana Odcatia: Nos. 3,373, 4,21)0-93, 4,899, 7,051, 7,439, aud 10,39G.
358 THE JEirS IDOLAlOKw
dajB together, nor demt undl Aey got what ihey wmnted;
hot this obstinacy was only for the sake of tbemaelTea and
arose from the most ardent self4oTe and love of the world,
and not at all for the sake of Grod. • • • Hence m the other
life the Jewish nation is in HeD, except a few who have
been principled in good, and except thdr infeuits.
' It was the pecoliar genins of the Jews to worship external
things as holy and divine without any sense of internal hofi-
ness and diyinity ; thns to adore their fathers Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob, and Moses and David as deities, and to account
as holy and divine every stone and piece of wood included
in their ritual, as the ark and the tables therein, the lamp,
the altar, the garments of Aaron, the Urim and Thummim,
and afterwards the temple. Inasmuch therefore as more than
others they could place Divine Worship in things outside
themselves, and thereby act the Representative of a Churdi,
they were accepted for that purpose.'*
Bqpregentation independent of Character.
Swedenborg is very careful in cautioning us against the
opinion, that the Jewish nation was anything but a Sepre-
sentative Church. The Real Church exists alone in those who
love God and their neighbour, and of such love the Jews were
destitute —
^ Such has perpetually been the quality of that nation.
^ Let not any one then suppose, that there was any Church
'amongst them, but only the Representative of a Church;
' still less that they were chosen in preference to others for
* their goodness.'t
We are therefore in some sense to look at the Jews in the
Bible as we do at actors and actresses in a theatre playing as
♦ 'Arcana CoeUttia,' No«. 4,293, 10,430 and 8,588.
t Arcana C<de$tia,' No8. 4,316 and 7,439.
THE JEWS MEEELT PERF0RMEB8. 359
kings and queens and great people. In themselves, the Jews
were a low rabble, but their baseness was no disqualification
for their representation of great parts.
* In representations the character of the representative was
* of no account, but only the principle represented ; wherefore
* things divine, celestial and spiritual were expressed not only
* by persons, but by articles inanimate, as by Aaron's gar-
^ ments, by the ark and altar, by oxen and sheep sacrificed,
^ by bread and oil and frankincense.
* Hence Kings, good and bad alike, represented the Lord's
* wisdom, and Priests, good and bad alike. His love, so long
* as they conformed to the laws set down for their several
* parts. The High Priest might be the most impure of man-
* kind and at heart an idolator, but if he washed himself with
* water, ministered in pontifical vestments, stood before the
* lighted candles and executed his prescribed routine, so far
* as the efficacy of the Representative Church was concerned,
* his private character was a matter of no consequence.'*
So much for the actors; now a few words about their
stage—
The Land of Canaan.
* The Church of the Lord had existed in Canaan from the
* most ancient times ; there was the garden of Eden, and there
* subsisted remains of the Most -iXjicient Church, especially
* among those who were called Hittites and Hivites. Hence
' it came to pass, that all its places, its mountains, rivers, valleys
* and borders were representative of divine, celestial and
* spiritual things. For this reason Abraham was commanded
^ to settle in Canaan, and its inheritance was promised to his
' posterity, that out of them a Representative Church might
* be formed, and that the names consecrated by the Most
« 'Arcana deUstia,* Nos. 665. 1,361. 3,670 and 42K1
360 DJB8TBUCTI0N OF THE CANAANITES.
^Ancient and Andent Churches might bo preserved in the
*Word.'«
Not until the Jews occupied Canaan did the Representative
Church begin —
* Jacob's sons did not constitute any Church, nor did their
* posterity until they had gone out of Egypt, nor actually
* before they came mto Canaan/f
The invasion of Canaan and the extirpation of the Canaanites
by tifio Israelites is to bo read as symbolic of the victory of
Jesus Clirist over the powers of Hell and of His subjugation
in every regenerate heart of selfislmess to righteousness.
* The reason why the Israelites destroyed the Canaanites
^ was because the Canaanites represented things infernal and
^ diabolical and the Israelites things celestial and spiritual/ 1
Tlie atrocities practised (m the Canaanites are explained
by Swedcnborg as permitted to the Jews because they were
80 gross and hardened, tliat slaughter and cruelty could not
hurt or deprave tliem further.
* The Jews were permitted to destroy the Canaanites
* because they were not a Church but only the Representative
* of a Church, thus neither was the Lord present with them
* except only representatively ; for they were in externals with-
* out internals, that is, in worship representative of goodness
• ' Arcana Gelestia,' Nos. 3,686, 4,447 and 7,439.
t 'Arcana Ccelestia,^ No. 4,439.
X * Arcana CaicsUa^^ Nos. 6,306 and 9,320.
Ill dealing with this analogy we must not conclude that Hell is dcstrovc*!
or Selfishness extir]>ated ; the Lord when in the flesh suhjugated the Hells ;
and in our private regeneration selfishness is not abolished, but subonliiiated
to the service of goodness. Hence Swedenborg translates destruction in the
literal sense to removal in the spiritual. * The reason why to destroy denotes
• to remove is, because they who are in good and truth, in no case destroy
'those who are in e\'il and falsehood, inasmuch as they act from good and not
' fromoTil, and good is from the Lord, who never destroys any one.* — ^Arcana
,» No. 9,820.
CBUELTT COULD NOT DEPRAVE JEWS.
861
and truth, but not in goodness and truth. To persons of
such a character it Is permitted to destroy, to kill, to give to
slaughter and to the curse ; but it is not permitted to those
who are in externals and in the same time in internals,
inasmuch as these must act from good, and good is from the
Lord. That Israel was of such a character Moses declares
openly — " Speak not then in thine heart, after that Jehovah
" thy God hath cast the nations out before thee, saying. For
" my righteousness Jehovah hath brought me in to possess
" this land. Not for thy righteousness, nor for the upright-
^^ ness of thine heart, dost thou go to possess this land. . • •
" for thou art a stiff-necked people."* ... In a word the
Israelites were the very worst of nations.'t
It will be said, that Jehovah sanctioned or directed the
extermination of the nations of Canaan by the mouth of Moses,
who said to Israel ' Wlicn Jehovah thy God shall deliver them
* l>efore thee, thou shalt smite them and utterly destroy tificm ;
* thou shall make no covenant with them, nor shew mercy
* unto them.' J Such objections our Author makes short work
of by means of his doctrine of appearances. Commenting on
the story told in Genesis of Jacob ' wrestling with a man until
* break of day,' and calling the place of struggle Peniel, * for/
* concluded Jacob, * I have seen God face to face, and my life
* is preserved,' § he observes —
* Evil Spirits, and not good, wrestled with Jacob, for by
* wrestling is signified temptation, and temptation is never
* wrought by good Spirits, but by evil. Good Spirits and
* Angels never excite evils and falses, but defend Man against
* them, and bend them to good ; for good Spirits are led by
* the Lord, and nothing ever proceeds from the Lord but holy
* good and holy truth The reason why the wrestler
* called himself God, was because Jacob believed it, like his
* * Deuteronomy y ix. 4 to C.
t ' Arcana Cidcidla,' No. 9,320.
% * Deuteronomy ^"^ vii. 2.
$ ' OenciU; xxxii. 24 to 30.
862 TBUTH AK nfVBBSIOir OF AFPEABAHCE.
'posteritj, who fiuided that JehoYah waa in thdr external
^ sanctity, when jet He was only reprcaentatiyelj present.
^ Thej believed also, that Jehovah led into temptations, that
^ all evil was from Him, and that He was in anger and fhiy
^ when thej were punished ; wherefbre according to their hdief
^ttia 80 eaipressed in the Word^ when jet Jehovah never leads
^ into temptations, neither is anj evil in anj case from Him,
^ neither is He ever in anger, still less in fiirj.'*
With this principle in hand, that the letter of the Scrip-
tures is not the absolute truth, but merelj a statement of the
appearance of the truth to the Jews, Swedenborg evades the
whole series of charges brought against the Divine justice
and goodness on the supposition, that Jehovah was in reality
what Jewish historj represents Him to be. As Sir John
Herschel sajs in regard to Astronomj —
^Almost all its conclusions stand in open and striking
' contradiction to those of superficial and vulgar observation,
^ and with what appears to everj one, till he has understood
^ and weighed the proofs to the contrarj, the most positive
* evidence of his senses — '
So Swedenborg would have us believe, that the spirit of
the Word is as frequentlj a complete inversion of the letter
as are man j of the sure conclusions of Astronomj inversions
^ of superficial and vulgar observation,' and ' the most positive
^ evidence of the senses.'
On the stage of Canaan, then, the Israelites plajed a
Church.
Tliemaehea^ their Landj their Lawj their Worship were all
Symbolic.
Jesus in His walk with the disciples to Emmaus, ^ be^-
' ning at Moses and all the Prophets expounded to them in all
* .arcana Occleatia,* No. 4,307.
THE INNER SENSE OF JEWISH HIBTOBT. 863
^ the Scriptures the things concerning Himself/ and theologians
from the earliest times have delighted in discovering or invent-
ing analogies between Jewish History and Christian Life ; but
I question whether it ever entered into any mind to conceive
the infinite correspondence between the two which Sweden-
borg asserts.
*A11 things comprised in the Jewish nation, collectively
* and individually, represented the Lord and the celestial and
^ spiritual things of Hb Kingdom. Hence Canaan was called
^ the Holy Land, although nothing could be less holy, being
* inhabited by profane and idolatrous people.'*
Nor were the scenery of Canaan and the deeds of the
Jews alone s}nnbolIc of the Lord and His Elingdom, but trans-
formed to writing the record constitutes the Word in which —
* There is not even an iota, or apex, or little twirl of the
^letters, which docs not contain a Divine principle. ... It
*has been shewn me from Heaven, that in the Word, not
* only every expression, but also every syllable, and, what is
* incredible, every little twirl of a syllable in the Hebrew
* involves what is holy. That this is the case I can positively
* assert, but I know, that it transcends belief.' t
It is Swedenborg's business in the ^Arcana Ccdeatid* to dis-
cover this Divine principle in Genesis and Exodus, and to this
end he devotes, as we have observed, eight quartos. Within
the letter of these books he discerns in general two senses, an
inner or Spiritual Sense, and an inmost or Celestial Sense,
and professes to draw therefrom a whole cycle of information
relating to Jesus Christ, His incarnation. His temptations, and
His glorification ; also concerning Man, his will and under-
standing, his regeneration or damnation, and about Angels
and their Heavens, and Devils and their Hells.
« *Arcana CceUsHaj' Noe. 1,097 and 1,437.
t 'Arcana Ccelestui,' No. 9,349.
364
. THB BPIBITUAL MEAKINQ OF JUDAIBX •
* This Internal senso of the Word has heretofore been known
to no man ; nor could It be known, because the world even the
learned part of it, has imagined, that the historical i:elations of
the Word are merely histories, and infold nothing deeper.
^ It has indeed been maintained, that every iota is divinely
inspired, but no more was thereby meant, than that certain
historical facts were made known by revelation, and that
from them certain tenets may be deduced useful to faith, and
profitable to the teacher and the taught ; also, that the narra-
tives being divinely inspired have a divine influence on men's
minds, and arc operative of good above all other histories.
* Mere histories, however, considered in themselves, have
little effect in human amendment ; nor are they of any use
in the future life, where they sink Into oblivion. Of what
use in eternity will it bo to know, that Hagar was a servant-
maid, and tliat she was given to Abraham by Sarah ? or to
know the history of Ishmael, or even that of Abraliam ?
* Notlilng is required to qualify Souls for Heaven, but
what relates to the Lord and Is from the Lord. For the
communication of these means to Heaven the Word was
given, and these means the Scriptures Interiorly contain.
* Apart from the Internal Sense there Is no more Divinity
in the Scriptures than in any other history. The Internal
Sense alone makes the narrative Divine.'*
It would be difficult without actual inspection to obtain
any Idea of the wealth of meaning, which Swedenborg alleges
he reads off from the symbolic letter of Jewish history.
* The rituals of the Jewish Church embrace the arcana of
* the Christian Church. They to whom the meaning of these
* rituals Is opened may In this life discern the arcana of the
* Lord's Church, and when they pass into another life, the
^ arcana of His Kingdom in the Heavens.
• * Arcana OoeUgHa,** Nos. 1,540 and 1680.
ETERNAL VALUE OP JUDAISM. 365
^Infinite and incffablo things exist within the letter of
* every part of the Word, although to those whose ideas are
* sealed it appears a simple history.'*
Granting these premises it is in nowise surprising, that he
should fill eight quarto volumes ^vith the exposition of Genesis
and Exodus. Save in the limit of human endurance there is
no cause why he should not have gone on to eighty or eight
hundred.
In the Jewish Economy down to the most trivial particidars
he saw God and Heaven manifested, and it stands to reason,
that eternity alone is adequate to their discussion. To Mr.
Emerson's inquiry, ' What have I to do with jasper and sar-
donyx, beryl and chalcedony, what with arks and passovers,
ephahs, heave offerings and unleavened bread; what with
chariots of fire and ephods ; what with lepers and omerods ;
what with dragons crowned and homed, behemoth and
unicorn?' Swedenborg would answer, * Everything: these,
which you think obsolete, old-world rubbish, are types of
eternal realities, are springs of perennial life: if only you
approach them in the light of the science of Correspondences,
which Science I have been commissioned by the Lord to
revive, they will be found oracles of wisdom, to which the
haughtiest in your enlightened age will do well if he
reverently attend.'
There is not a syllable in the Scriptures, which Sweden-
borg docs not mam tain to be pregnant with life and meaning;
genealogies and lists of names and numbers not excepted.
' The names and numbers of the Word are arranged in
' scries of exquisite connection, and involve heavenly arcana.'t
The Jews tgnorant of their own Symbolism.
The Jews were quite unconscious of the drift of the drama
* * Armna Coekstia,' Nos. 3,478, 4,772, 6,017, 0020, and 8,920.
t * Arcana f^aleatia,' Noh. 482, 1,224, 1,888, and 2,395.
866 THE GAU8E OF JEWISH IGNORANCE.
in which they were engaged ; they had no idea whatevei* of
the mysteries which lay within their law and history.
^ The Israelites more than any people adored external
^things, and made all holiness, yea, everything Divine to
^ consist therein.
^ They had no other opinion concerning their rituals, than
^ that Divine worship consisted in their performance, and were
* utterly regardless of what they represented and signified.
*They did not know, nor were they willing to know the
^ inner meaning of their ceremonies ; nor that there was a life
^ after death, or any Heaven ; but they were a people altogether
^ sensual and corporeal.
* Worship with them was therefore merely idolatrous ; for
^ every rite which is unconnected with an inward spiritual
^principle of charity is nothing but a superstition and idolatry.
* Hence the Jews were prone to worship any gods whatever,
* provided only, they were persuaded, that such gods would
* cause them to prosper.'*
Why they were thus ignorant.
* They had no desire to know spiritual things, for they
* were immersed in the lusts of self-love.
^ They were in heart idolaters, and absolutely united as to
* love with Devils in Hell.
* Had spiritual trutlis therefore been made known to them,
^they would have utterly denied and contemned them, and
* would thereby have profaned interior goods and truths, as
* they profaned exterior by becoming open idolaters. This is
* the reason why interior truths are so rarely extant in the
letter of the Old Testament.' f
Profanation, or the reception of goodness and truth, and
• * Arcana CoAttUa,' Nob. 8,479, 4,208, 4,281, 4.444, 8,588, and 8,788.
t * Aroana CoAuHia,' Nob. 3,878, 3,479, 4,847, and 10,490.
DANGEU OF PBOFANATION. 367
sabsequcnt relapse into evil and falsehood, is described by
Swedenborg as the most terrible of calamities; the lot of
profaners in the other life being that of the worst of Devils.
Hence it is the constant effort of the Divine Providence to
prevent Man from ascending heights from which it is foreseen
he wiU drop into irretrievable perdition. It is better to remain
bad than to become good and fall back into wickedness; to
remain in gloom than to enter into light and return to dark-
ness. For this cause the Jews were kept in ignorance, * for
* they were capable of profaning truth more than any people.
* Had they known the inner truths of the Word and the
meaning of their rituals and at the same time had lived in
their natural temper, in self-love and love of the world, in
hatred and revenge among themselves, and in cruelty and
contempt towards the Gentiles, they would have committed
profanation and gone to the deepest damnation. Wherefore
spiritual truth was withheld from them as far as possible, in-
somuch, that they did not even know, that they were to live
after death.
*As the character of the Jews remains unchanged they
are still withheld from faith, though they live in the midst of
Christendom.
' That the Jewish nation could not receive interior truths,
howsoever they might have been revealed to them, is manifest
from the Jews of the present day ; for they arc acquainted
with interior things, inasmuch as they dwell among Christians,
but still they reject and scoff at them. Several of them
likewise, who have become Christians, do the same at heart.'*
The Use of the Jewish Church.
Probably and very pertinently the reader will inquire.
* 'Arcana Cakstia,' Nos. 302, 4,750-61, 4,847, and 6,963.
368 THE USB OF THE JEWISH CHUBCH.
* What was tho good of this sham Chnrch instituted by Moses?'
The answer supplied by Swedenborg is peculiar, and it may
not be easy to understand ; but I shall try to set it forth plainly ;
and tho answer, if comprehended, will furnish a key to a large
area of Swedenborgian doctrine.
We die, we shed our grosser bodies, and find ourselves in
the Spiritual World, but our connection with Earth is not
thereby dissolved.
* The Spiritual and Natural Worlds are so connected with
^ each other, that they are incapable of separation, particularly
' with respect to Men's interiors, which are called Souls and
^ Minds : these, if good are united with the Souls and Minds^
* of Angels, but if evil with tho Souls and Minds of Devils.-
^ Such is the nature of this union, that if Angels and Spirits
^ were to be removed from a Man he would instantly fall down
^ dead like a stock or a stone ; and on the other hand, Angds,
^ and Spirits could not subsist if they were deprived of their
* support and resting place in Mankind.'*
Death gives us the freedom of the Inner World, but tho
floor of our existence remains on Earth. We are to consider
the Grood of Earth as the basis of Heaven, and the Evil of
Earth as tho basis of Hell. The communion of Saints — the
communion of Devils — ^is to Swedenborg no empty phrase,
but the expression of a momentous reality.
* Heaven and the Church constitute together one body,
* whose soul and life is the Lord Jehovah, who is our Lord,
* the Saviour.' t
Heaven being thus rooted in the Church, serious conse-
quences naturally arise when the Church becomes diminished
or degenerated.
^ When tho Church on Earth is desolated by falses and
' consummated by evils the Angels bitterly lament. At such
* » Vera Christiana Rdigio: No. 118. t * ^Woww,' No. 15.
THE USB OF THE JEWI8H CHURCH. 369
^ times they compare their state of Kfe to sleepiness, for then
*' Heaven is to them like a seat withdrawn, or like a bodj
* deprived of its feet ; but when the Church is restored by the
* Lord, they compare their state of life to wakefulness.'*
Such becAmc the plight of the Angels as the Ancient Church
declined into idolatry and magic ; and to prevent Heaven from
lapsing into chaos, through the loss of a foundation, the Jewish
Church was instituted. Here comes a difficult point, which
it may be hard to render clear. The infernal interiors of the
Jews could not of course furnish a ground for angelic habita-
tion, but their rituals were in this manner rendered efficacious
for the purpose.
* The Israelites were capable of being kept in a holy ex-
* temal principle, and thus of possessing holy rituals, whereby
* were represented the things of the Lord's Kingdom ; they
^ had also a holy veneration for Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
* for Moses and Aaron, and for David, by whom the Lord
* was represented, and especially for the Word, in wliich all
^ and singular were representative and significative of things
* Divine.' t
To this assertion let us add the consideration, that among
the Angels there are countless grades of intelligence —
* There are Angelic Spirits, who are simple and who do
* not perplex themselves with profound ideas, taking no con-
* cem with the internal states of Men, but merely with their
* extenial. If Men appear holy they are satisfied.'!
These simple Angels perceived the heavenly meaning of
the Mosaic ritual and the awe with which it was performed by
the Jews, and in their sanctimony they rested. Hie upper
Angels incapable of association with a race so vile as Israel
* * Coronis,* No. 18.
t ' Arama CceUitia,' No. 3,479.
t * Arcana CieU^Ua,' No. 8,6rtH
2 u
870 THE DIVINE INCARNATION.
were nevertbeless able to unite themBelvea to their simple
brethren.
In this way then the Jewish Church was made serviceable
as the means of conjunction between Heaven and Earth, all
other means having failed.
Two other uses the Jews Ailfilled, so closely connected,
that they might almost be called one. First ; their character
was such, that their history could become a revelation of God
depicted in the boldest letters of flesh and blood : but of this
more hereafter in another chapter. Second; their sensual
stock provided the unique instrument for —
The Divine Incarnation,
When in the course of time the foundation of the Heavens
in Jewish sanctimony gave way, to save Humanity from de-
struction, Jehovah made His appearance in Jesus Christ. In
the body derived from the Virgin He did not, as the Roman
Catholics say, assume immaculate innocence ; but on the con-
trary He took from Mary a body in which were concentrated
by hereditary transmission the lust, the pride, the avarice, the
hatred of Judaism as developed in consummate fullness and
vigour in the royal line of David.
In that body, whose every faculty was an avenue to the
Hells, He met as on a battle field, the Powers of Evil and
Darkness, and subdued them.*
* ' I stand here, a witness for the Lord Jesns to tell men what he did for
• them ; and what Ho did was this. — He took your flesh and made it holy ;
• and therefore He will make every one holy, who believes in Him. Ho
• came inio your battle and trampled under foot Satan, the world, the flesh,
• yea, all enemies of living men ; and He saith to every one, *•• Be ye holy,
• *• for I am holy." Do you say that Man was unacquainted with the warrings
« of the flesh ? I dare ye to say, that the Lord our Saviour had an easier
• passage through life than you had. I dare ye to say, that His work was a
• holiday work. Can ye follow in His footsteps, if Ho did not do the work V
Edward Irving. Quoted by Mrs. Oliphant in her 'Life of Irving,* Vol II
rNS«M6-
THB LORD ROSE WITH A PERFECT BODY. 371
As He conquered, He transformed the infirm organization
received from Mary into a Divine organization. Incarnate in
Judaism He fulfilled its higher and inner Law under the worst*
possible conditions. He conformed perfectly the fallen human
inheritance from the Virgin to the Divine Will — of which
Will the Jewish Law was a coarse emblem.
As the body from Mary was a smnmary of Judaism, we
therefore, by analogy, discern in the words and deeds of
Hebrew Patriarchs, Prophets and Kings the life and expe-
rience of Jesus Christ.
Made one with God, the body of Christ became an im-
movable and everlasting foundation for the Heavens and a
perpetual origin for the Church.
Swedenborg, very carefiiUy, in many repetitions sets forth,
that our Saviour's resurrection was altogether diverse from
man's. Our bodies we shall lay in the grave and we our-
selves pass as Spirits into Heaven or Hell ; but He rose from
the tomb with a body perfect to ultimates.
* That the Lord was conceived of Jehovali the Father, and
*was thus God from conception, is a known thing in the
* Church ; and also, that He rose again with His whole body,
* for He left nothing in the sepulchre ; of which He also con-
* firmed His disciples, saying, " Behold ray hands and my feet,
* " that it is I myself : handle me and see ; for a Spirit hath
* " not flesh and bones, as ye see me have : " and although He
* was a man as to flesh and bones, yet He entered in through
*the doors, that were shut, and after that He manifested
* Himself, He became invisible.* The case is otherwise with
* every man ; for man rises at death only as to his spirit, and
^ not as to his body.
* The Lord before His advent into the world was indeed
« Luke, xxiv. 39 : John, xx. 19.
2 i\ 2
372 THE BODT FBOM MART DISSIPATED.
' present with the members of the CJhurch, but then His
* presence was mediate through the Angels, who represented
^ Him ; whereas since His advent He is present immediately
' with the Church and Mankind.'*
Along with these assertions we must read the following —
*' When Man is regenerated he is made new and altogether
^ another person ; wherefore he is sidd to be bom agun and
^ created anew. From this image it maj in some measure be
^ conceived what the glorification of the Lord was.
^ Yet He was not regenerated as Man is, but was made
' Divine, and this from the veriest Divine Love, for He was
* made Divine Love itself.
* The Lord in the course of the most grievous temptation
*combat8,t reduced all things in Himself so completely to
* Divine Order, that nothing whatever remained of the hu-
^ manity He had from the mother ; so that He was not made
* new, as another man, but altogether Divine.
' He utterly put off what was maternal and material so
* that He was no longer the Son of Mary, but God Himself
^ manifest as Man.'}
• The function of the Jewish Church being thus superseded
by Jesus Christ, its members were scattered over the earth,
and —
* ' Arcana Coelestia,' Nos. 1,729, 5,078, 9,315, 10,044, 10,125, 10,252,
10,738, and 10,825, and Tera Christiana Religio; No. 109.
t ' I believe that my Lord did come down and toil, and sweat, and traTail,
' in exceeding great sorrow, in this mass of temptation, with which I and
* every sinful man am oppressed; did bring His Divine presence into death-
* possessed humanity. . . did suffer its sorrows and pains, and swimming
* anguish, its darkness, wastencss, disconsolateness, and hiddcnness fiom tho
' countenance of God ; and by His faith and patience did win for Himself the
' name of the Man of Sorrows and tlie Author and Finisher of our faith.'
Edward Irvikg. Mrs. Oliphant's ''Life of Irving ^^ Vol. II., page 109.
t 'Arcana Ocdettia,' Nob. 2,159, 2,816, 3,212, 3,318, 4.727, and 6,135.
FOUR CHURCHES SINCE CREATION. 373
The Christian Church
Waa established, first among a few Jews and then, as Is always
the case with a New Church, among Gentiles.
Into the history of the Christian Church, Swedenborg
enters very generally. He plainly regards it as a mere
scaffolding and preparation for a nobler and an eternal struc-
ture. That It should fall away and come to an end he seems
to consider a matter of course, asserting, that all Churches
begin In love and In the lapse of time sink Into mere Intellec-
tual faith, and finish up In hatred and false doctrine.
* It Is agreeable to Divine Order, that there should have
been Four Churches on this earth since the creation of the
world. Every day begins with morning, advances to noon,
and closes In night, and after that begins afresh ; every year
too commences from the spring, advances through summer
to autumn, and then closes In winter, and after that enters
on a new beginning. It Is to produce these effects, that the
sun rises In the east, proceeds through the south to the west,
and sets in the north, after which he rises again. Similar to
this Is the case with the Churches ; the first of them, wlilch
was the Most Ancient, was as the morning, the spring, and
the east; the second, or the Ancient, was as the noon, the
summer, and the south ; the third,' [the Jewish] ' was as the
evening, the autumn, and the west; and the fourth,' [the
Christian] * was as the night, the winter, and the north.
From these progressions according to Order, the wise An-
cients drew their conclusions of the Four Ages of the World,
the first of which they called Golden, tlie second Silver, the
third Copper, and the fourth Iron, by which Metals also tlic
Churches themselves were represented In the Imago seen by
Nebuchadnezzar. ' •
* ' Vera Christiana BcUffio,' No. 762; * Coronia,* Nos. 2 to 17; ' Jrcana
'Coskslia,* Nos. 1,634. 2,231, aud 4,683.
374 ALL CHURCHES FALL TO BUIN.
This correspondence, often repeated hj our Author, limps
sadly. After what we have read of the Jewish Church,
analogy is driven into strange contradiction when that Church
is likened to evening, autunm, and copper, and the Church of
the Apostles to night, winter, and iron !*
What is true of the Four Churches as a whole is true of
each Church ; each has had its spring, summer, autumn, and
winter, its morning, noon, evening, and night. Vaiying the
comparison to human life, he writes—
* It is with the Church in general as with Man m particular.
' His first state is a state of innocence, of love to his parents,
^ his nurse and infant companions ; his second state is a state
* of light, for when the infant becomes a boy, he acquires and
* believes truth ; his third state is when he begins to love the
^ world and himself, and just as these loves increase faith
^ decreases, and with faith, love to God and the neighbour ; his
^ fourth and last state is when he has no concern about truths,
* and especially when he denies them.
* Such states are also the states of every Church from its
* beginning to its end.'f
Following out this idea he tells us
* All the members of the primitive Christian Church Kved
* as brethren in mutual love : but in process of time, charity
^ diminished and at length vanished away ; and as charity
* vanished, evils succeeded, and with evils, falses, whence arose
* schisms and heresies. These would never have existed if
* charity had continued to live and rule ; for, in such case, they
^ would not have called schism by the name of schism, nor
* In another place we find him saying, ' The Christian Chuich compared
' to the Most Ancient was as the light of the moon and stars hy night to the
* light of the sun hy day ;' and again, * The internals of the Christian and
* Ancient Churches were precisely similar; they did not differ in the least
* except in externals.*— • Arcana CoduUa,' Nos. 4,489 and 1,083.
t *Aroama Oodutia* No. 10,134.
DEVASTATED CHRISTENDOM. 375
* heresy by the name of heresy, but doctrines agreeable to
* each disciple's way of thinking. These they would have left
* to every one's conscience, neither judging nor condemning
^ any one for his opinions, provided ho did not deny funda*^
^ mental principles, such as the Lord, Eternal Life, and the
* Word, and maintained nothing contrary to Divine Otderi
* that is to the Ten Commandments.'*
In the same strain he writes —
' The several Churches of the Christian world are dis-^
^ tinguished by their doctrines and hence have taken the names
^ of Roman Catholics, Lutherans, Calvinists and many others.
* These distinctions never would have been made, if love td
* the Lord and the neighbour had remained the chief article
* of faith.' t
. Of the Christian Church in the long centuries between its
rise and his own time, Swedenborg has nothing to say. Li
fact, he shews no sign that his reading ever extended into
ecclesiastical history and biography. Of one thing he was
certain — the Christian Church had come to its end.
^ The Church at this day is founded on opinion and not on
^ conduct. He who believes otherwise than the Church teaches,
^ is cast out of its communion and his character defamed ;
^ but he who thieves (if he does not do so flagrantly) lies,
^ betrays and commits adultery, is yet called a Christian, if
' only he frequents a place of worship and talks piously.
^ Christians attend church and are in some degree of
* holiness whilst there ; they receive the Holy Supper, they
^ sometimes indulge in sanctimonious conversation, and they
* live in external friendship. To the outer eye they display
^ nothing but what is pleasant, but inwardly they are altogether
• ^Areana Gcdestiat* No. 1,884. Penecation never requiied any other
warrant than the reseryation heginning with provided.
t 'Arcana CctUiiia,* No. 1,799.
376 DEYABTATED CHSI8TEHD0M.
* different. In the other life it becomes manifest, that they
'hated each other, that they hated the tmths of faith, and
< especially, that they hated the Lord ; for when the Lord is
' merely named before them, their spite, aversion and contempt
' for Him break forth ; and this in the case of those, who in
' the world were accustomed to speak reverently of Him, and
' who had preached His GrospeL . . • Such are Christians at
'this day as to their interiors, except a few who are not
* known.'*
Of the Philosophy of the time, he says —
' The members of the Christian Church at this day believe
' nothing, but what is comprehended by their Senses ; and not
' only do they reason from the Senses, but also extend such
' reasoning to Divine Arcana by a philosophy unknown to the
'Ancients. The consequence is, that intellectual light is
' utterly darkened, and the darkness has become so thick as
' hardly to admit of being dispersed.'t
What then was the use of Swedenborg venturing abroad
in such a night? may be asked. He answers — giving the
same reason for the new advent of Christ by him as for His
first advent in the blackness of Judaism —
' At this day there is scarcely any Faith, becatise there is
' not any Charity. It is the Consummation of the Age. For
'this reason, the Arcana of the Word are now revealed,
' because men are too dull to profane them.
' The reason why the interior contents of the Word are
' now opened, is because the Church is so void of faith and
' love, that although men know and understand, still they do
' not acknowledge and still less believe, except a few, who are
' in a life of goodness and are called ^^ the Elect.''
^ These Elect may now be instructed, and amongst them
• * Areana OoOeitia,* No8. 4,689 and 8,489.
t 'Aream Osbfim/ No. 2,124.
THE DEVIL*8 CENTURY. 377
*a New Church is about to be established. Where these
* Elect are, the Lord alone knows. There vnll he few within
* the Church, New Churches in former times were raised up
* among the Gentiles.'*
The badness of the times in the matter of education was
thus shewn to him —
* There was represented to me some children, who were
* combed by their mothers so cruelly, that blood followed the
^ comb : by which was represented, that such is the education
* of children at this day.'f
To assign proofs, that the moral and spiritual life of Europe
had last century reached a pitch of desolation such as almost
to justify the sa^ang, that the Devil's will was done on Earth
as in Hell, would be superfluous, for public opinion is now
very generally settled as to the fact, and our Author does no
more than corroborate that opinion from his peculiar stand-
point.
^ That the Last Judgement is at hand cannot so plainly
* appear on Earth and within the Church as in the other life,
* whither all Souls come and flock together. The World of
* Spirits} is at this day full of Evil Genii and Evil Spirits,
* chiefly from the Cluistian World, amongst whom there reigns
' nothing but hatred, revenge, cruelty, obscenity and treach-
* crous machinations.
' The Souls who arrive from Christendom have scarcely
* any other thought and purpose than how to become the
' greatest and possess all things, so utterly are they consumed
* ' Arcana Ccdestia,* Nos. 3,398 and 3,898.
t * Arcana Cali^stia,' No. 2,125.
X Tho World of Spirits is neither Ucaven nor Uell, but an intormediHto
placu or state between both, into which man enters immediately after death ;
and then, after a certain time, the duration of which \e determined by his
condition of mind, he is either elevated into Heaven, or cast into Uell.
378 THE CONSUMMATION OF THE AGE.
* with self-love and love of the world. Many of them enter-
^ tain no other than filthy, lecherous and profane thoughts, and
^ talk of nothing else among themselves ; besides they make
* light of and altogether despise whatever relates to charity
^ and faith ; they even do not acknowledge the Lord, and hate
' those who do : for in the other life the heart and mind are
^ manifest.
^ Moreover hereditary evils, accumulated from the wicked-
^ ness of past generations, * are become most malignant, and,
^ like fires hid and cherished inwardly, stimulate men to more
^ atrocious profanation than heretofore of all that is right and
* pious.
^ Such are the Souls which pass in troops at this day from
* Earth into the World of Spirits.'*
The Christian Church having thus attained its period, the
hour for the birth of a New Church had arrived. Swedenborg
was its Apostle, but except among the few Elect, whose
whereabouts were unknown, he had no hope of adherents from
out the old ecclesiasticism. Possibly after the failure of the
^Arcana Ccelestiaj* in a mercantile sense, he might have
adopted the language of Paul and Barnabas, addressing the
Jews — " It was necessary, that the Word of God should first
** have been spoken to you : but seeing ye put it from you,
" and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, lo, we
" turn to the Gentiles." f Unlike Paul and Barnabas however
he made no effort to discover the Gentiles, but as we shall see,
kept hanmiering fiway at the old rocks in which he said he
knew there was no gold.
How firmly his trust was set on the Gentiles appears from
many passages, such as the following : —
^ When any Church becomes no Church, that is when
• 'Arotma OaHuUa,' No«. S,131 and 2,122.
t il«li xiH, 46.
THE CHURCH TRANSFERRED TO GENTILES. 379
Charity perishes, and a New Church is established by the
Lord, seldom, if ever, does the establishment take place
amongst those in whom the Old Church existed, but with
those amongst whom there was heretofore no Church, that
is, amongst the Gentiles. Such was the case when the Most
Ancient Church, the Ancient Church, and the Jewish Church
perished. The same will be the case with the Christian
Church. The reason for this transfer is, that the GentileU
are influenced by no false principles against the truths of
faith, for they know not what the truths of faith are.
*• When the Old Church has closed Heaven against itself,
a New Church is always established amongst the nations out
of the Church. Hence the Church was translated from the
Jews to the Gentiles, and in the same way the Church at
this day is being transferred to the Gentiles. . . . What is
wonderful, the Gentiles adore one God under a Human Form;
wherefore, when they hear of the Lord they receive and
acknowledge Him; neither can a New Church be established
amongst others.'*
Swedenborg's opinion of the Gentiles from experience in
the Spiritual World was very high. After death, those of
them who are good, are instructed in true doctrine by the
Angels and received into Heaven.
* They behave modestly, intelligently and wisely, and
* easily imbibe the truths they are taught. . . . They indulge
* no hatred, never revenge injuries, never practise stratagem
^ nor artifice, no, nor wish ill to Christians, although Christians
^ on their part despise the Gentiles, and do them all the hurt
' they can.
^ There are some Gentiles, who during their abode in the
^ world have learnt, that Christians lead the worst of lives,
^ being addicted to adultery, hatred and quarrelling, to
• * Areana Ccdeitm,' No«. 1.360, 2,986, 4,747 and 9,256.
380 GENTILES VEB8U8 CHRISTIANS.
drankenness and like enormitieS} which they are shocked at
as contrary to their laws, manners, and religion. These dread
more than others to accept the truths of faith, but when
assured by the Angels, that such crimes are in complete
opposition to Christianity, they believe and adore the Lord,
but not without some hesitation.
^Once I entered into discourse with some Chinese con-
cerning the Lord, but when I called Him Christ, a kind of
repugnance was discernible amongst them. The cause was
perceived to bej that in the world they had contracted a
prejudice against His name, by observing that Christians led
worse lives than Gentiles. When I simply called Him Lord
they were inwardly moved. Afterwards they were instructed
by the Angels, that Christian doctrine inculcates love and
charity above any other doctrine in the whole earth, but that
there are few who live according to it.^*
This writing accords very closely with the notions com-
monly entertained last century as to the innocence and gentle-
ness of the Pagan nations ; an opinion which Rousseau was
not loath to use against civilization and Voltaire against
Christianity. Li the badness of Christians we fully concur,
but our more intimate acquaintance with heathens has com-
pletely abolished all romance about their virtue in comparison
with Europeans. Swedenborg's Gentiles in our modem light
look very like fancy pictures.
The History of the World is in Swedenborg's eyes the
History of the Church. The Human Race is to him One
Great Man of which the Church is the brain, the heart and
the lungs. Without a Church, Heaven would be without a
Body and without Heaven, Mankind would vanish away.
* There cannot be conjunction with Heaven unless there
* 'Arcana Gdnttia,' Nus. 2,^9 to 2,G05.
nUMANITT ONE. 381
* be somewhere on Earth a Church, where the Word is, and
* where through the Word, the Lord is known ; for the Lord
* is God of Heaven and Earth, and without Him is no salvation.
* It is enough that there be a Church where the Word is,
* although it should consist of comparatively few. Through
* the Church the Lord is present everywhere throughout the
* Earth, and Heaven is conjoined with the Human Race.'*
It is essential in reading Swedenborg to bear in mind, that
he always assumes the unity of Humanity in Heaven on
Earth and in Hell. Nothing takes place in one which does
not affect the others ; and both Heaven and Hell find their
body and basis through Man on Earth. Let the reader try
to compass this thought, for imtil it becomes familiar much
in Swedenborg must remain obscure. The fact which is
every year becoming clearer to natural philosophers, that
the Universe is one, and that the least things in our little
world are related to and influenced by the sun and the far
distant stars, Swedenborg proclaims to be true of Humanity.
Humanity is one; Angels and Men and Devils are knit
together in one web from which no escape is possible. To
suppose that independence or isolation can exist in such a
system, is to yield to the wildest illusion.
Here must end this long chapter. It will not be imagined,
that in this sketch of the Four Churches, comprising the
History of the Heart of Humanity, that we have reviewed the
^Arcana Ccelestia:^ we have merely drawn one long thread
from out its enormous coil. As we observed at starting there
is little of value in Swedenborg, which may not be found some-
where in its multitudinous pages, but we have many other
reviews to make, and the reader, if he pleases, may fairly
consider them as extensions of the present survey.
ft 'Scriptwra Sacra,* No. 104.
( 382 )
CHAPTER VL
LONDON AND STOCKHOLM.
SwEDENBOKQ during the seven or eight years (1749 to 1756)
when Yniting and printing the ^Arcana Coelesttd' probably
passed most of his time in London, making occasional trips to
Sweden. That he was out of London in 1750 is plain from
the bookseller Lewises Advertisement, in which he says, Uiat
the manuscript of the second volume of the ^ Arcana^^ was
received from abroad, and that ^ the bare postage of Part I.
* was twelve shillings, of Part 11. eighteen shillings, and of
Part III. twenty-two shillings.^ What would we not give
for some more Uvely information with similar precision I
Where Swedenborg lodged in London in those years
we do not know; but most likely in the neighbourhood of
his printer, Mr. Hart, of Poppin's Court, Fleet Street, of
whose company, it is said, he was fond, and that he used
to spend his evenings at his house. A short way to the
west of Poppln's Court is Gough Square, where, while
Swedenborg was writing his * ilrcawa,' Johnson (1747 to
1755) was compiling his Dictionary with the aid of six
clerks. In Salisbury Square, on the otlier side of Fleet
Street, Kichardson was doing a thriving trade as printer and
novelist with all England as customers for ^ Clarissa Uarlowe*
and ^ Sir Charles Orandison^^ and with Goldsmith for his
proof reader. Further west, on the same side of the street,
young William Cowpcr and young Edmund Burke were
lodged in the Middle Temple ; but I can find no sign, that
Johnson or Goldsmith or Bui'ke or Cowper ever knew even
SWEDENBOBG IN LONDON. 383
the name of Uie Seer with whom, in their walks through Fleet
Street, they must have rubbed shoulders.
With his publisher Lewis in Paternoster Row, we wonder
how Swedenborg got on. As the ' Arcana^ did not sell Lewis
as a tradesman eould have little satisfaction in .the business,
but the chances are, that our Author kept all pleasant by
paying liberally. Mrs. Lewis, it is recorded, * thought Swcden-
^ borg a good and sensible man, but too apt to spiritualize
* things.'
The JMoravians.
As Swedenborg's mind and religious principles were now
settled his visits to the Moravians in Fetter Lane would
naturally cease; and his writings prove, that from tlieir
admirer he had passed into their censor, or, as the Brethren
will say, into their traducer. He relates —
* I have had much conversation with the people called
* Moravians, or Hcemhuttcrs. On examinmg them it was
* found, that they were cunning in the art of conciliation,
* saying, that they were the remains of the Apostolic Church,
' and that therefore they salute each other as brethren, and
* those who receive the more internal of their mysteries, as
* mothers ; also, that they teach faith better than the rest of
* mankind, and love the Lord, because He endured the cross,
* calling Him the Lamb, and the Throne of Grace, and
' similar expressions, by which they beguile men into the
' belief, that the true Christian Church is among them. They
' examine those who listen to their smooth harangues, as to
* whether they may safely entrust them with their mysteries ;
' which mysteries they conceal or reveal accordingly ; en-
' deavouring ui the latter case by admonition, and even by
* threats, to prevent the betrayal of their secret doctrine
* concerning the Lord. ^
' Moravians in the Spiritual World were admitted to the
* outmost Heaven, but unable to endure the presence of the
384 THB MORAYIAm.
^ Angels there, they fled away* Afterwards they were carried
* to the inmost Heaven, but when they felt its sphere of love
^ to the Lord, they were seized with anguish of heart, and
* began to suffer inward tortures, and to move convulsively
^ like persons in the agony of death, and Uierefore cast them-
^ selves headlong thence.
♦ The minds of these Moravians were explored by Spirits,
^ whose duty it is to make such inquisition, who reported, that
* they slight the Lord, that their rejection of the life of charity
* amounts to abhorrence,* Uiat they make out that the Word
^ of the Old Testament is useless, and despise the Evangelists,
* selecting from Paul, according to their good pleasure, what-
^ ever is said of faith alone: and that these are their mysteries,
* which they conceal from the world.
^ As soon as it became apparent, that they merely acknow-
^ ledge the Lord as the Arians do ; despise the Word of the
^ Prophets and Evangelists, and hold a life of Charity in abhor-
* rencc, they were adjudged Anti-Christs, as rejecting the three
* essentials of the Christian Church, namely, the Divinity of
^ the Lord, the Word, and Charity, and were banished from
' among Christians.
* When Zinzcndorf first came into the Spiritual Worldf
^ and was permitted to speak after his manner on earth, I heard
^lum solemnly asserting, that he knew the Mysteries of
^ Heaven, and that no one enters Heaven who is not of his
^ doctrine ; and also, that they who do good works for the sake
^ of salvation, are utterly damned, and that he would raUier
* * Christ is our only perfection. All perfection is faith in the blood of
' Christ. It is impated, not inherent. Wo are perfect in Christ : we are
* never perfect in oarselves. Wo reject all self-denial ; we trample on it.
* In faith we do whatever we desire, and nothing more. We laugh at all
' mortification : no purification precedes perfect love.' Zinzendorf quoted in
* Southey'B * X«/c of WesUy,' Vol. I., page 219, ed. of 1868.
t Zinzendorf did not die until 170O, and in using this extract, just now,
I anticipate a little, but it is of no consequence.
MORAVIANS AND QUAKERS. 385
^ admit AUieists into his congregation than such. The Lord,
* he said, was adopted by God the Father as His Son, because
^ He endured the cross, and that still He was a mere man.
* When it was said to him, that the Lord was conceived by God
* the Father, he replied, that he thought of that matter as he
* chose : not daring to speak out as the Jews do.*
' Moreover I have perceived many scandals from his
* followers when I have been reading the Evangelists.
' The Moravians say, that, they have a sensation whereby
* they experience an interior confirmation of their dogmas.
* It was shewn them, however, that the sensation proceeds
* from visionary Spirits, who confirm a man in all his religious
^ notions, and enter into closer conjunction with those, who,
^ like the Moravians, are fond of their religion and think much
* about it.'t
What a pity Wesley in his controversy with the Moravians
had not Swedenborg for an ally! He would have been
unanswerable.
The QuaJcera.
If the Moravians should designate the above report slan-
derous and preposterous, what shall the Quakers say of the
following ?
* 30 October J 1748. — I heard the Quakers in tieir General
' Meeting, and though they spoke of the Lord yet they
' recognize three persons. They also acknowledge the Word,
' but they do not regard it, for they say, that they likewise
' are actuated by the Holy Spirit. . . .
* * Count Zinzendorf loved to keep all things closely/ testifies Wesley.
' Zinzendorf was specious, artful and insinuating,' says Alexander Knox.
Southoy's * Life of Wesley,* Vol. II., p. 70 and 322.
t 'Cantinuatio de Ultimo Judido,' Nos. 86 to 90; ' Diarium Spirituale,"
Nos. 5,988, 93, and 95, 6043, 60, 62, 68, 74, 78, and 81 ; * Diar, Appendix,*
p. 14, 16, and 19.
2 ('
386 QUAKERS.
' They have no concern about the Lord, but only for the
* Holy Spirit. In the other life it is diacovercd that they
* abhor Him and set themselves up for the Holy Spirit, of
' which they continually thought whilst on earth and waited
* for in their meetings.
' Tliey talk but little and divulge scarcely anything of what
' they think. It was said th(^y have no settled articles of faith,
* and that their opinions waver with the influx of tlie Spirit.'*
Swedenborg allows that the Quakers are not deceived in
thinking themselves mider supernatural influence, but that
the Spirit which moves them is not Divine ; on the contrary,
they are tlie tools of ' enthusiastic Spirits who are so grossly
* stupid as to imagine themselves the Holy Spirit.' These
maniac Spirits enter into their fullest satisfaction when they
find men and women willing to yield themselves to their
possession and to share in their phantasy, ' that they are wiser
^ and holier than the rest of mankind.'
At first Swedenborg was willing to think well of the
Quakers, considering them ' honest and upright, having heard
' nothing to the contrary,' but his spiritual experience soon
led him to a widely different conclusion. He writes —
* 1 X 2 November^ 1748. — When I awoke in the night, I
* felt in the hair of mv head a multitude of very small snakes.
* It was perceived tliat Quaker Spirits had been plotting
* against me whilst I was asleep, but without effect. It was
* only by their phantasies that they were among my hair where
* I felt them.' t
As in the ease of the ^Foravians he credits the Quakers
with the pos^sessiou of mysteries, but far more atrocious.
' 28 October^ 1748. — They are indomitably obstinate in
' their aversion to having their thoughts and doings made
♦ * l>iaruui\ Spirituale^^ Nos. 3,775 and 3,735.
t * Diarium Sjinntitale^* No. 3,810.
QUAKERS. 387.
* pubUc. They strove wiUi me and the Spirits who desired
^ (but in vain) to know their secrets.'*
Swedenborg, however, was not to be baffled, and the next
day made him master of their mysteries.
* 29 October^ 1748. — The secret worship of the Quakers,
^ sedulously concealed from the world, was made manifest. It
^ is a worship so wicked, execrable and abominable, that were
^ it known to Christians, they would expel Quakers from
^ society, and permit them to live only among beasts.
* They have a vile communion of wives. The women say
* they are possessed by the Devil, and that they can only be
* delivered if men filled with the Holy Ghost cohabit with
* them. Men and women sit round a table, which was repre-
* sented to me, and wait for the influx of the Spirit. . . .
^ When a woman feels the Devil, she selects a man and retires
* with him' — ^but it is impossible to extend the quotation ;
nevertheless we refrain unwillingly. The decorum which
prescribes our reticence is essentially immodest, for as Dr.
Johnson said, ^ the man of nice words is the man of nasty
* ideas.' Swedenborg writes on these matters wiUi the child-
like directness of the Bible (or rather say, with Uie unim-
passioned simplicity of science) — a directness as pure as our
premeditated daintiness is the reverse.
* 30 October. — It was enquired whether the Quakers
^ engaged in these obscene rites with their daughters and
' maid-servants, and it was said, that they did. . . . Parents
' do not resist when a command of the Spirit is pleaded. They
* are, however, somewhat withheld by the fear, lest their
^ virgins should become mothers before they are married, and
^ thus their wickedness come to light. The Quakers desire to
' appear holy and blameless before men ; hence they veil their
* worship in profound secrecy.'t
• ' Dianum Spirituale,' No. 8,751.
t * Diarium JSjnriinaU,' Not. 8,765 and 8,766-69.
2 c 2
388 QUAKERS.
^ It was shewn me, that ever since the rise of Qoakerism,
^ thej have gone on from bad to worse, and at length, bv com-
' mand of their Holy Spirit, into these secret abominations.
' I conversed with their founder, as well as with Penn, who
' told me, that they had no part in such doings. They who
' practise them are sent down after death into a dark place
* where they sit in comers, and appear like dregs of oiL**
^ 1 November J 1748. — It was said to me by an angelic
' interpreter, that Qnaker Spirits wander abont in thick forests
' like swine ; and this, because of their avarice and nastincss.
^ It was said, however, that they were not boars, but she-
^ swine.
^ 30 October.— The Quaker Spirit is the foulest of Devils,
^ wherefore the Quaker Hell is the deepest, and in it they are
< the vilest offscouring.
' Concerning the lives of the Quakers, I was instructed
^ that they are like the Jews, loving riches for the mere sake
* of possession/f
There is much more in the Diary about the Quakers of a
similar tenor, but enough ! The last observation comparing
them to Jews may not be without truth, but for the mysteries,
Bah!
The Rev. Theophllus Lindsey, who left the Church of
England, and in 1774 opened the Unitarian Chapel in £ssex
Street, Strand, relates the following anecdote —
^ I cannot omit an account which I received from a person
* living, of great worth and credit ; that a fiiend of his,
^ several years ago, walking with Baron ) Swedenborg along
^ Cheapside, in one part the Baron suddenly bowed very low
* to the ground, when the gentleman lifting him up and asking
• ' Comiinvatio de Ultimo Judieio,' No. 84.
t ' Diarium SjpirituaU,' Nos. 3,785 and 3,772-73.
I It b ■earceljT necessary to repeat that Swedenborg was not a Baron.
M08E8 AND DAVID. 389
^ what he was about, the Baron replied by asking him, if he
^ did not see ]\Ioses pass by, and told him that he had bowed
^ to him. A man that could see Moses walking along Cheap-
* side might see anything.'*
In this anecdote there are evident signs of fiction. If
Swedenborg saw Moses, he certainly could not be surprised
that his comrade did not. From Lindsey, too, we have the
story third hand — from a friend's friend. It is said of a shop,
that three removes are as bad as a fire : an anecdote by three
removes runs the risk of becoming as bad as a lie. Few in-
deed can bear two or three facts in memory for any distance
without spilling, and in the endeavour to recover what has
dropped they are sure therewith to pick up and incorporate
some dirt. Presently we shall read the same anecdote in
another shape and with another name than ]\[oses.
That Swedenl)t)rg had any intercourse with the Hebrew
legislator I cannot discover In his writings. With few of the
Bible wortliies does he seem to have had much to do ; indeed
he shews himself anxious to diminish the awe with which we
are accustomed to regard them and to encourage us to treat
them as a very average sort of persons. * The Apostles and
* Prophets,' he says, ' were no better than other people,' f
and in his Diary we find tlie sweet singer of Israel, * the
^ man after the Lord's own heart,' described as an associate
of Devils.
King David.
' 23 October J 1748. — David is possessed with the lust of
* being chief in Heaven. . . . Persuaded that he was a god
* he proclaimed himself one.
* 'A Second AtltlrrSM to the Stmltutn of Oj-jitrd am/ (^amhriihjt irlatUff to
'7i*»M (^hn'iftf nn'I the On'yin of tite Great Errors coiuxrnlny him.* By
Thcophilus Lindsey, M.A., London: 1790. Page 178.
t ^AjioealjfpiU Sevelaia,* No. 790.
390 KING DAVIU.
^ 24 October J 1748. — ^He openly confessed and asseverated
that he did not understand what he wrote; that he ml^t
have thought that his writings included arcana, but what they
were he knew not; that he might have known a certain
Personage was to come into the World, but that he had no
further knowledge respecting Him ; and that he applied all
things he wrote to himself and the Jews. He said a Spirit
spake through him as a Spirit speaks through me, and thus
that he and I were of a like quality ; but it was given me to
tell him, that he had no knowledge of the Lord, and had
therefore no knowledge of faith, that he was ignorant of the
interiors of the Word and remained solely in its letter ; that
he did not understand what the Spirit spoke through him,
and thus that he and I were very different. ... To this he
had no reply.
^ I spake with him also concerning the Gentiles of whom
he had so great a hatred, saying, that Abraham was an
idolator, that the Jews were worse than the Gentiles, that
the Church had been transferred to them, and that now
Christians were worse than Gentiles.
* 25 October. — David is wicked, and a slave of deceitful
Spirits, who say they treat him like a dog. His mind is full
of cruelty and adultery, and without conscience he medi-
tates and contrives mischief.^
David Joins a Conspiracy to annihilate our Author.
' 4 November, — When I went to bed Evil Spirits formed
a design to destroy me, and for this end took measures to
call out Hell and every malicious Spirit. They first drew
the Dragon over to their side, but having used him badly he
got away. Then they endeavoured to summon all Hell, and
surround and attack me in a body, and make an end of me,
as so often they have tried before. . . . They evoked David
also, who appeared before me in a dense cloud. For some
time they persisted, doing their utmost, whilst I reposed in
SAINT FALL. 391
* safety, fearing nothing, but observing their cflFortfl. At last
* they gave up, confessing their attempt to be in vain.'*
The reader will no doubt be ready with a five supply of
appropriate commentary on the preceding and following pas-
sages, and may wonder at my silence. For the present,
however, I choose to keep simply to narration, and reserve
for a fiiture pjige a judgement on the mass of Swedenborg's
other-world gossip about persons.
According to Lindsey, Swedcnborg met Moses in Cheaj)-
side, but according to Southey he met St. Paul.
' Gustavo Brandcr was walking with Emanuel Swedenborg
' In Cheapside, when the Baron pulled oif his hat and made a
* respectful bow. "Who are you bowing toV said Brander.
* " You did not si»e him," replied Swedcnborg. " It was St.
* " Paul ; 1 know him very well.'' 'f
Whether this encounter took place in Cheapside or not wo
cannot say, but as wv. shall now see, it is quite true, that
Swedenborg thought he knew St Paul very well.
St. Paul
' 28 October J 1 748. — A certain Spirit came to me of a
* sudden and inquired whether I was not speaking ill of hini.
* It was perceived that he was Paul. It was replied, that I
*" was not thinking about him.
* 10 Julf/j 174J). — A certain Devil fancied himself the very
' I)t*vil who deceived Adam and Kve, according to the vulgar
' opinicm. ... It was given me to hear Paul speaking with
^ him and saying he wished to be his companion, and that they
' would go together and make themselves gods. . . . but they
' were rejected wherever they went.
* • Duiriiim Spinlu<t!e,* Nn». 3,0riG-6.>, 3,07 l-TO, 3,»W-2-S4, 3,«;.-^S, and 3,8.^1 .
t l!k)uthey'M * Common Place Buok^' FourtJi ^^cric8. Personal Oliscrvatiuiis
and UccoUfictions, page 515.
392 SAINT PAUL.
^ During my sleep I have been infested hy adulterers, and
this Devil and Paul have lent their aid to my infesters, and
so stubbornly held me in an adulterous train of thought, that
I could scarcely release myself. • . . Hence Paulas nefarious
character was made known.
{No date) ' Paul is among the worst of the Apostles, as
has been made known to me by large experience. The love
of self, whereby he was governed before he preached the
Gospel, continued to rule him afterwards ; and from that love
he had a passion for scenes of controversy and tumult. He
did all things from the end of being greatest in Heaven and
judging the tribes of Israel.
* That such is Paul's character is manifest from very much
experience, for I have spoken with him more than with others.
The rest of the Apostles in the other life rejected him from
their society and refused to recognize him. Besides he
connected himself with one of the worst Devils, who would
fain rule all things, and pledged himself to obtain for him his
end. It would be tedious for me to write all 1 know about
Paul ; were I to do so the report would be long enough to
fill sheets.
* That Paul wrote Epistles does not prove him good, for
even the impious can preach well and write epistles. It is
one thing to be good and another to speak and write about
goodness, as was said to him. Moreover, he has not mentioned
in his Epistles the least word of what the Lord taught, nor
cited one of His parables ; so therefore he received nothing
from the Lord's life and discourse, when nevertheless the
very Gospel itself is in the Evangelists.
{Xo date) ' Paul associated himself with the worst Devils
and wished to form a Heaven in which he should be the
dispenser of pleasures. This he attempted, but became
worse in consequence, and was cast down. I told him his
pur|)ose was hellish and not heavenly. He wished especially
to have hypocrites about him. There were hypocrites with
I>OLHEM. 393
mc for several days, which I knew from the adiing of my
teeth. They tacitly pressed upon me without intermission,
and it was perceived and said, tiiat the pressure was from
Paul. He hates the internal sense of the Word, and the
anger of his hatred draws hypocrites around him. Such is
the connection of things. Hypocrites believe nothing, but
tliey value the literal sense of the Word because they can
use it to overawe the simple and appear pious.
.... * Paul undenvent many dangers and punishments
on earth tliat he might be the greatest . . . Hence he re-
jects the inner truths of the Word, because they testify
against the glory of the world and self-righteousness.
{No date) ' Spoke with Paul. He wished to be an in-
troducer to Heaven, and that the Lord would receive those
whom he should pass. The proposal is absurd, for there is no
entrance to Heaven by favour, but by life, and life is known
only to the Lord. 1 told him that he might see from the
letter of the Word, that he was coveting Peter's office, to
whom the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven had been given.
He said he wished to take the office from Peter for he had
done greater service. Paul utterly disUkes Peter, and says
he imderstood nothing and could no nothing.'*
From his Diary we learn that Swedcnborg was in Stock-
holm in 1751. Li that year his old friend and coadjutor,
Polhem, the engineer, whose daughter, Emerentia, he wished
to marry, died, and it was his privilege to see both sides of
his grave.
' Polliem died on Monday, and spoke with me on Thurs-
' day. I was invited to the funeral. Polhem saw the hearse,
* the attendants, and the whole procession. He also saw them
♦ * Diarium Spiritunh,' Nos. 3,728, 4,321, 4,412-13, and 'Diarium Minus,*
Nos. 4,501-62 and 4,031.
394 POLHEM.
^ let down the coffin into the grave, and conversed with me
* while the interment was going on, askmg why they buried
* him when he was alive. When the priest pronounced that
* he would rise again at the Day of Judgement, he asked why
^ this was, since he had risen already. He wondered that such
^ a belief should prevail, considering that he was even now
^ alive ; he also wondered at the belief in the resurrection of
^ the body, for he said he felt himself then in the body ; with
* other remarks.'*
On spiritual acquaintance he found Polhem to be a thorough
Materialist and Atheist.
^ Polhem is an engineer. During his earthly life he
meditated much, but always on material things— on natural
philosophy applied to mechanics. . . . He confirmed himself
in the belief that there was no God, that everything was by
Nature, and that life in man and beast was a sort of me-
chanical operation, t . . . He did not wish to know that
there was any life ailer death, any internal man, any Heaven
and Hell, anything Divine beyond Nature, any Providence
beyond blind fate and chance, and had set his mind steadily
against the admission of the truth. . • . Hence, now he
learns and teaches in what way various animals may be
created, as birds, mice and cats, and also infants and men,
kneading and moulding them out of a certain composition.
He was told that this was mere trifling, for by phantasy any
of these might be made to appear in the Spiritual World ;
but he is stupid and perseveres. He sits in a dark chamber
amongst men's bones, for he has no knowledge of the living,
but only of the dead.|
• ^Diarium J/iniw/ Tafel's ed., page 65.
t This latter was something like Swedenborg's own opinion in former
days. See his * Mechanism of the Intercourse between the JSoul and the Body^^
published in 1734.
X *Diarxum Spirituale,* Nos. 4,722 and 6,071.
8PIB1TS USING SWEDENBORG'S EYES. 395
The opportunity which Swedenborg gave Polhem of con-
templating his own obsequies, he accorded to several others ;*
and the mode in which the vision was effected, he thus
explains —
' Neither Spirits, nor still less Angels, are able to see things
on Earth, for the light of its Sun is to them thick darkness.
Nevertheless Spirits and Angels, when it pleases the Ijord,
may see the objects of the World through the eyes of Men ;
but this is only allowed by the Lord when He permits a Man
to converse and be in company with Angels and Spirits. It
has thus been granted them to see the things of Earth
through my eyes, and to see them as distinctly as I do, and
likewise to hear what was said by Men in conversation with
me.
' It has several times happened, that Spirits have seen
through me, to their great amazement, the friends whom they
knew in the flesh. Some mothers have seen their husbands
and children, and have desired, that I would tell them they
were present and saw them, and describe their condition in
the Spiritual World. This, however, I was forbidden to do,
and for this amongst other reasons; because they would
have said, I was out of my senses, or would have thought,
that what I told them was the invention of a delirious
imagination : for I was well aware, that although with their
lips they allowed the existence of Spirits, and the resurrection
of the dead, yet in their hearts they did not believe any such
thing.
' When my interior sight was first opened, and Spirits and
Angels saw the World through my eyes, they were so
astonished, that they called it a miracle of miracles, and felt
a new joy in thinking that a way of communication was thus
opened between Heaven and Earth. This delight, however,
* ' Diarium JSpirituaU,* No. 5,837.
396 ANGELS AND MEN.
^ onl J laflted a few months : the thing afterwards grew familiar
^ to them ; and it now occasions in them no surprise.
^ I have >>ecn informed that, with other Men, Spirits and
* Angels do not see the least of anything in this AVorld, but
^ are only sensible of the thoughts and affections of those with
^ whom they are associated.
^ Hence it may appear, that ]Man was so created, that
^ during his life on Earth amongst Men, he might at the same
^ time live in Heaven amongst Angels, and during his life in
^ Heaven amongst Angeb, he might at the same time also live
^ on Earth amongst Men ; so that Heaven and Earth might
^ be together, and might form a One, Men knowing what is
^ in Heaven, and Angels what is in the World ; and that
^ when Men departed from this life, they might pass from the
^ Lord's Kingdom on Earth into the Lord's Kingdom in the
^ Heavens, noc as into a strange land, but as into that with
* which they were familiar : but as Man grew so corporeal, he
* closed Heaven against himself.'*
From this passage it is plain that Swedenborg regarded
his power of spiritual vision as a normal and orderly attribute
of Humanity. It is sin and sensuality which have deprived us
of the blessing of open intercourse with the Angels.
Ere we quit tliis subject we must cite another instance of
Spirits seeing through our Author's eyes.
* I was in the street of a great city,' [London doubtless]
* and saw little boys fighting with each other, whilst the crowd
* which flocked around them enjoyed the sight exceedingly ;
* and I was informed, that their parents themselves excited
* the children to such combats. The good Spirits and Angels,
* who saw through my eyes what was passing, were so shocked,
* that I perceived their horror, and that it was caused especially
' by the conduct of the parents who incited their cliildren to
* 'Arcana CcdestiOf^ No. 1,880.
niARLES XII. AND HIS WIFE. 397
^ such fighting. Thcj said, that thus in early life parents
* extinguished all the mutual love, and all the innocence, which
' infants receive from the Lord, and initiate them into hatred
* and revenge ; and therefore, that they studiously exclude
' them from Heaven, where there is nothing hut mutual love.
* Let parents, therefore, who wish well to their children,
' he ware of such practices.'*
Charles XII.
It may be remembered, that Charles XII. brought
Swedcnborg and Polhem together, and, that importuned by
Bishop Svedberg, he gave him the place of Assessor in the
College of Mines. The patron of his youth Swedenborg now
neets in the Spiritual AVorld, and thus he draws his picture —
a moat horrid Devil.
^ There was a certain person, who was the most obstinate
mortal on earth (Charles XII.) He was obstincite to such a
degree, that he would never desist from his opinion, even
though he should suffer the most cruel death, or the most
direful hell.
* Charles was married in the next life to a woman of similar
charact(T, but more stubborn than himself. He hated her
with deadly hatred, which he shewed by plunging a knife in
her back, tearing out her heart, and biting and foaming at
the mouth. This she endured imtil her turn came, when,
assisted by Devils, she retaliated. She was more headstrong
tlian he, nor did she care for life or any torture. At length
she brought matters to such a pass, that he began to be
obedient, to cohabit as she desired, and to' — in fact, do
something a bold bad woman might command, — ^ in token of
submission. He then praised her because she had conquered.
... It was said, slie was possessed by She-Devils, chiefly
• 'Ih Codo et dt Inferno,* No. ai4.
308 CHAKLES xn.
from Holland^ who had subjugated their hii«bandib It
akfiWTi^ that although sach coaplei hate one another utterij,
vet they experience an internal satisfaction in struggling for
martterv, and bv it are abno^t welded into one.
^ Charlfrfl waA a striking instance of th<;><e who are inwardly
netfijtfa and outwardlv civil and modest. At heart he was
the uifAt haughty man on earth ; not only did he aspire to be
the greatest in hi?i own Kingdom, but in the whole world,
and in a kind of way thought himself a god. In the pre-
nfittd: of danger his mind wa^ remarkably clear ; he surveyed
hill cirfniniMtances at a glance ; saw how to use a hundred
ofSceni for his purpose; and drew conclusions as correctly
an rapidly. Pitiless and cruel he set no value on human life.
^ iteligion he considered was only for the simple, and Ma-
horneianisiii he preferred to Christianity. He had no belief
in tlie existence of God, except as the Human 3Iind, and
particularly, as himself. He wished that men should eradi-
cati5 the very thought of God.
* I heard what Charles had done every day for about five
weeks, and this in regular order, and not a single thing
omitted. It was thus attested, that we carry with us into
the next world whatever we think, wish, do, hear and see, to
the lejist minutiae, in the whole course of our lives.
* It was di.seov<jred that for years Charles had conversed
with Kpirits, and that he was not only instructed concerning
the Lord and the Church, but frequently admonished to go
home to Sweden and make peace. This ran coimter to all
his inrlinattonH, and he detcnnined to extirpate the name of
i\w. Lord by Htheisttcal doctrine : at the same time he plunged
lu^udlong into abominations, wliich ought not to be so much
as named.
' In the next life ho went on in the same way. He was
lioNtilc*. to tlu! Lord and wished to destroy all who confessed
llim. lie (hnired to be the very Devil and Commander of
the llellri. lie declared war against the Lord, and all who
CHARLES XI. 399
^ wcro in the Hells flocked about him, worshipped him, and
* instigated him to every iniquity, so that after a time ho
* became the very concentration of Hell with scarcely a rcm-
* nant of human nature left.
* He was told, that if tliere were myriads of myriads of
* men like himself, they would not have the weight of a feather
^ against the Lord, but to this he paid no attention, for he was
^ a supreme simpleton.
* After he had been frequently punished, he was sent to
* the most squalid Hell where there were swine ; but never-
^ theless, he persisted. Li the end he became an idiot, and
* entirely ossified, as if lie were a skeleton. To relate all I
* know about him would fill a book.'*
^Concerning Charles XL and his Queen.^
Swedenborg was led to the mother of Charles XIL,whom
he found livhig as the wife of a priest, but meeting her eartldy
husband, she was re-united to him. Here is the story —
^ When I was in the spirit one night I was conducted by
* a c(»mpanion to a certain house, neatly built of wood, I
* believed it to be the residence of the Queen of Charles XL,
* but at tliat time she was the wife of a certain priest, but was
' living there alone without her husband. On entering, I saw
' a piece of her needlework on the table, beautifully wrought.
' Aly companion conmienced a conversation with her, but I
' cannot recollect it, for it was about something peculiar to the
' spiritual state.
* Aftenvards I awoke and talked witli her in the natural
' state. I told her I had been brought thither by my com-
' panion on account of Evil Spirits, who haunt me during
' sleep, and who were then lying in ambush for me. Sub-
* Arranjrod ami coiKlcusod from *Diarium Spirituale,,* Nor. 3,005, 4,351,
•1,7 n-3. 4.715-52, 4,754, 4,703-4, 4,823, 4,857, 4,873, 4,884-5, 4802, 4,900-1,
5,010, 0.010, r>,0]3, 6,015, 6,018-9, 6,028, 6,034 Mid 0,087.
400 ULRIKA ELEONORA.
* sequently I told her the Evil Spirit then in search of me
^ was Charles XII. At tlie mention and idea of him she
^ instantly knew, that he was her son, and called him Carl, in
* a motlierly tone of voice. After some conversation about his
^ boyhood at court, it came into her mind, that when Queen of
* Sweden she was mother of two daughters as well as Charles.
^ I described their state and circumstances, and then her
* husband Charles XI. was brought to her recollection.
* Wherefore they came together and mutually recognized
^ each other, and consociated as husband and wife.
* This took place in 1762, on the 22nd of January.'
Queen Ulriha Eleonora.
One of the daughters of Charles XI. was Ulrika Eleonora,
who succeeded to the Swedish throne on the death of her
brother Charles XII. in 1719. She it was, who ennobled the
Svedberg family, changing the name to Swedenborg. Bishop
Svedberg thought her a ' a great hypocrite,' and her husband
Frederick, to whom she resigned the crown, * good for little.'
Ulrika died in 1741, Frederick in 1751, and our Author met
them both in the Spiritual World. Frederick he describes aa
a foul adulterer, but Ulrika thus —
* \5th of August^ 1761. — In the morning there appeared
' to me an elegant chariot in which sat a man magnificently
* dressed, and presently a young woman, with a plain face
* and the air of a servant, and spinning yam in her hand. It
* was Queen Ulrika Eleonora I beheld.'
Twenty years had elapsed since her deatli. Was the end
of her probation attained? Swedenborg does not say, but
continues —
* I did not know at the instant from whence she was, nor
* who she was. While the chariot passed, the man called her
' to mount and sit beside him. She was unwilling, but he
* pergaiaded her.
* The man was from some dudiy in Germany. He had
GUSTAVUS AD0LPIIU8. 401
* died in boyhood, and like Ulrika had studied the Word, and
* had loved the* knowledge of spiritual truth.
' The two drove through various Societies, and thus induced
* upon themselves agreeable states and conjugal sympathy ;
* after which they appeared in a magnificent palace.'*
Gusta\nis Vasa who delivered Sweden from the tyranny
of the Danes, and whose name is set in everlasting honour, is
spoken of by Swedenborg as an idiot f in Hell by reason of
his love of dominion. Scarcely more surprising is his account
of Gustavus Adolphus, one of the very noblest characters
preserved in history.
Oustnvus Adolphus,
* That the Word might not be hidden in Germany by the
* Pope, the Lord stirred up Gustavus Adolphus, who fought
* for the Reformation.' J
Admitting him to be a Divine instrument, yet, in himself,
he was a vile instrument.
' Gustavus Adolphus and his family conversed with me for
several days. At first I thought him to be among the lower
Angels, but afterwards, on leaving me, I discerned that his
influence was iuU of adultery. ... I saw him sitting on a
horse with his face as when in battle, without his cap, armed,
and like an ordinary soldier. His state was represented to
me by a little yellow dog, which was changed into a cat;
then by a fox in whose mouth flowed back a white foam ;
then by a great serpent; next by a crafty animal of the
small panther kind, which passed over to the left side, and at
the same time by a lion on the right, which did not appear
very clearly to me. Afterwards it was shewn how he had
lived with women and harlots in the most foul and abandoned
• * Diarium J^irituale,* No. 6,009. f • Diarium SpirUuaU,' No. 6,034.
I ' JMoniiifi SjpiriimUe,* Appendix, p. 14S.
2 li
402 CHRISTINA AND SVEDBERG.
^ manner. I then perceived, that he must have been so great
* an adulterer, as to have utterly despised conjugal love.'*
Christina, the eccentric daughter of Gustavus, whose house
Swedenborg visited when he was in Rome in 1739, he Uius
describes.
Queen Christina.
^ She was living in a handsome enough house, and em-
ployed in some spiritual work, which coiTcsponds to spinning.
Thither went Charles XII. to have some talk with her.
* She related how she had conversed with the Cardinals
when at Rome in a sportive style, whereby she captivated
them. She wished them to appear naked, to which they
replied, it was impossible, and very improper even to hint at
such a thing. . . .
* She treated the Pope as humourously. lie asked her
what she thought of Christ. She said, " He was " super
^^ papaJ*"* The Pope replied, that He was not, for He had
transferred His power to Peter, and so to him : this he spoke
of the Humanity from Mary. Christina rejoined, that the
Son of God is from eternity and equal with the Father, and
since the Father is above the Pope, so must be the Son. To
this the Pope, after meditation, could make no reply.'f
Bishop Svedberg.
Wo search the Diary in vain for any notice of the lively
Bishop, but in the ^Arcana Coilestia^ we meet with tliis
characteristic incident.
' In a dream my father appeared to me. I talked with
' him, saying, tliat a son, when ho had become a man, ought
* not to own his father for fatlier as in childhood. When a
^ c*htl(l, the father is in the Lord's place, and without him, the
• Oiiiriuw fipiritualf,* No. 3,191. f 'Diarivm J^iritvaU,' No. G,017.
AN EXECUTION. 403
^ child knows not what to do ; but when the child becomes a
^ man and can think and will for himself, tlien the Lord is his
* only Father, and to Him he ought to look.'*
Whatever we may think of 8wedenborg's other attempts
at character, tliis may pass for a genuine bit of portraiture.
Meddlesome here, Svedlierg could »carce be aught else
liereafter.
We learnt incidentally from the Diary, that Swedenborg
was in Stockholm at Polhem's funeral in 1751. By another
reference, we find him there in 1756. In that year a revolu-
tion was attempted in Sweden, and the leaders of the con-
spiracy, Count Bralie and Baron Ilorne, were executed on the
23rd of July, on which day Swcdenborg writes —
' Of those who are resuscitated from the dead^ and have
' made confession of faith in their last moments.
^ Bralie was beheaded at ten o^clock in the morning, and
* spoke with me at ten at night ; that is to say, twelve hours
* after his execution. He was with me almost without inter-
* ruption for several days. After two days he began to
* return to his fonner life, which consisted in loving worldly
^ things, and after three days, he relapsed into the evils,
* which he had made his own before he died.'f
Bobsahm pc)srti!>ly refers to Brahe's execution when ho
relates —
^ One day as a criminal was led oif to be beheaded, I was
by the side of Swedenborg, and asked him how such a person
felt at the instant of death. He answered, " When a man's
" head drops from the block, he loses all sensation. When
^^ he first awakes in the Spiritual World and finds that he is
" living, he is seized with the fear of his expected death, and
" tries to escape. Soon Good Spirits come to him, and
" tell him where he is, and he is then left to follow his own
* 'Arcana CWUitin,* No. 6,492. f 'Diarium JSjnritunU!,' No. 5,099.
2 li 2
404 FIVE NEW BOOKS.
^ ^^ inclinatioiis, whidi lead him to the pUtee where he abides
« « for ever/ "
In 1758 Swedenborg published in London the following
works —
1. ^ Heaven and its Wonders^ and HeU^ heard and
2. ^The Earths in our Solar System; and the
^ Earths in the Starry Heavens : with an account of
^ their Inhabitants^ Spirits and Angels^ from hearing
' and seeing,''
3. ^ The Last Judgement and the Destruction of
^ Babylon : shewing^ from Jiearing and seeing^ that all
^ the Predictions in the Apocalypse are at this day
'fulfiUed:
4. ' The New Jerusalem and its Heavenly Doctrine
* heard from Heaven : to which is prefaced information
' respecting the New Heaven and the New Earth.'*
5. * On the White Horse of the Apocalypse ; after-
' wards of the Spiritual or Internal Sense of the Wordy
* extracted from the Arcana Coelestia.^
( 406 )
CHAFPER VII.
HEAVEN AND HELL.*
Heaven and Hell is Swcdenborg's most readable book.
It is a dish of cream from off the ^ Arcana Ccelestia.^
He divides the Spiritual World into three regions —
Heaven, the World of Spirits, and Hell.
Heaven consists of a ^ great multitude, which no man
^ can number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and
' tongues,' who love God supremely and their neighbours as
themselves.
The World of Spirits is neither Heaven nor Hell, but an
intermediate place or state into which men enter at death,
and, after a certain probation, pass into Heaven or Hell.
Hell is the assembly of the Selfish, of all who love
themselves supremely, and gratify their lusts at any cost
to others.
TiiE World of Spirits.
At death only the decidedly good pass immediately into
Heaven, and the decidedly bad into Hell ; the great majority
abide for a while, varying from days to thirty yearsf in the
World of Spirits.
* * J)e (,'orh et ejus Mirabilibut, €i de Inferno^ ex Audiiii et Vitit, Lon-
dini: 1758.' Quarto, 272 pages.
t ' Some only enter the World of Spirits and are immediately taken ap
' into Ilcaven, or cast down into IIcll ; some remain there a few weeks, and
' others scrcral years, hvt none remain more than thirty jfeartJ' No. 426.
In the 'Apocalypse lierealctlf^ published in 1766, eight years after 'Heaven
406 PUBGATOBT.
Xo radical chauge is there wrought in the character :
such change is only possible on Earth: in the World of
Spirits, character is merely reduced to unity. A divided,
an inharmonious mind is tolerated neither in Heaven nor
Hell : a Spirit must be either cold or hot. The Good there-
fore in the World of Spirits are cured of faults of practice
and opinion inconsistent with their goodness, often not
without prolonged suffering. The Bad, on the other hand,
strip themselves of all pretences inconsistent with their bad-
ness, and reject all the pious and moral modes and maxims
whereby they deceived the unwary. The World of Spirits
in this respect, Swedenborg compares to a Stomach, which
divides the nutritious from the innutritions, and absorbs the
former into the body of Heaven, and casts the latter as filth
into Hell.
It may be asked. By what means are the Good distin-
guished from the Bad ? In the mass of Men, is not the tissue
of benevolence and selfishness so intertwined, that it is diffi-
cult, if not impossible to determine which has the prevalence?
True, Swedenborg would answer ; but nevertheless, one
or other has the prevalence, and the prevalence decides
whether the Spirit is Angel or Devil. * Every man,' he
says ' is influenced by many Loves ; but there is One Love
* among them which rules, and which the others serve : and
* whatever is the Kuling Love at death, remains supreme
' and unchanged to Eternity.'* The process therefore, which
is effected in the World of Spirits is nothing more than the
* and Hdl^ Bwedenborg rednceB the utmost limit of sojoarn in the World of
Hpirits from thirty to twenty yean*. Ho writes —
' All enter the World of Spirits immediately after death, and are there
' prepared, the good for Hearen, the wicked for Hell. Some abide there only
' a month or a year, and otliers from ten to thirty years ; and they who were
* permitted to construct imaginary Heavens' [of these we shall speak in
another chapter] * several centuries ; hvt at this day not longer them twetUy
* yeoTM.' No. «66. See also 'Apocalypse Explained,' No. 1,276.
♦ No. 477.
KESUKRECTIOX. 407
implicit subjection of the whole character to the Ruling
Love ; and the result appears in a harmonious being — an
Angel or a Devil.
A Man is said to die when his earthly body, whether by
siccident, diAcase, or old age, has become unfit to serve as a
medium between his Soul and the AVorld of Nature. As
soon then, as the motion of his heart and lungs ceases, he
opens his eyes in the World of Spirits, and finds himself in
a place and condition similar to that which he left on Earth ;
indeed so similar, that some find it difiicult to believe, that
over them has passed the great terror called Death.
' Very many of the Learned from the Christian World
are amazed, when they find themselves after death in a
body, in garments, and in houses, as they were on Earth ;
and when they recall to memory w^hat they thought of the
life after death — of the Soul, of Spirits, of Heaven and of
Hell, they are affected w^ith shame, and declare they had
thought like fools, and that the Simple were much wiser
than thev.
^ A certain novitiate Spirit, hearing me speak about the
Soul, inquired what it was, supposing himself to be still a
Jlan on Earth. AMien I told him that there is a Spirit in
every Man, in which his life resides, and that the body only
serves him to live upon the Earth — for that flesh and bone
neither live nor think — he hesitated what to believe. I
then asked him whether he had heard anything about the
Soul. He replied, " What is the Soul ? I know not what
'^ it is.'' I was then allowed to inform him, that he was now
a Soul or Spirit, — as he might know from the fact of his
being over my head, and not standing upon the earth,, and
asked him whether this was not evident to himself. On
hearing these words, he fled away in terror, crying, " I am
'* a Spirit ! I am a Spirit !"
^ A certain Jew, also, was so confident that he was living
408 RESURRECTION.
^ in the body, that it was with diBGicultj he could be persuaded
^ otherwise ; and even after it had been shewn him that he
^ was a Spirit, he persisted that he was a Man, because he
^ saw and heard.
^ Such are they who, during their abode on Earth, have
* led a merely corporeal life.'*
The extrication of the Spirit from the Body is an office
assigned to a certain order of Angels ; they receive Souls
kindly, and introduce them to their new sphere, where they
quickly seek out those with whom they have any affinity.
* I have frequently heard new-comers from Earth rejoicing
* at meeting their friends again, and their friends rejoicing
' at their arrival. Husbands and wives meet, and continue
* together for a long or short time, according to their
* mutual affinity. If they have held one another in inward
* aversion, they burst forth into open enmity, and sometimes
* into actual fighting.'f
In this first state after death, affairs proceed for a while
very much as on Earth. Curious Souls go sight-seeing ' in
^ cities, gardens and paradises, and are shewn magnificent
^ buildings and beautiful scenes.' Almost all are anxious to
be taken to Heaven, but out of thousands there is scarcely
one at this day, who has the least conception of what Heaven
really is.f
Gradually a second state supervenes ; the varnish of the
world begins to peel off as the Ruling Love breaks down all
pretences between itself and behaviour. The Good expe-
rience a relief as from bondage ; ' they feel as if awakened
' from sleep, and as though they had passed from shade into
' light. M The Bad ' no more disguise their intentions, but
' publish openly whatever they have done or thought, with-
' out any concern for their reputation, and rush headlong
• 'Dc Ultimo Judido,' No. 16, and 'Arcana ('(rlestia,* No 447.
t No. 494. i No. 495. !' No. 506.
INFALUBLE INQUISITION. 409
* into crimes of every kind, and are therefore frequently and
* grievously punished.'*
Hypocrites change most slowly, but in the end the most
perverse are reduced to simplicity and sincerity. There are
Angels whose duty it is to make inquisition into character,
and no craft can beguile them, for they are able to read off a
Spirit's life from his memory.
^ Certain Spirits denied the crimes they had done on
^ £arth, and, lest they should be supposed to be innocent,
' all their actions were recited in order from their own
* memory, from birth to death. They consisted chiefly of
^ adulteries and whoredoms.
' Some who had deceived others by wicked arts, and who
^ had committed robberies and thefts, were explored in the
^ same manner, and all their tricks enumerated in series :
' and they confessed ; for the facts were made manifest in
' light, together with every thought, intention, delight and
' fear, which agitated their minds at the time.
' Others who had accepted bribes, and made gain of judge-
' ment were examined, and their official lives detailed from
* their own memories. Every particular was recalled ; the
^ amount and nature of each bribe, the time when it was
^ offered, and the state of mind and intention in accepting
' it ; all rushed into recollection and were visibly exhibited
' to tlie hvstanderft. The criminal acts thus revealed
' amounted to manv hundreds. This was done in several
^ cases ; and, what is wonderful, even the memorandum books,
* in which these Spirits had made notes of their doings, were
' opened and read before them page by page.
' Others who had violated chastity were brought to simi-
' lar judgement, and every particular of their wickedness
' was recovered from their memories. The verv faces of the
' virgins and wives they had dishonoured, were exhibited as
* Nof*. 307 and 500.
410
ASGEUC i5Qnsnoi&
if prciii:nt, together with their pljces of mectiiig, their con-
vefMatioiiJi, and states of mind. These exposures were
sr;mctiines ci^iDtinaed for hours together, and succeeded each
other like a rapid panorama.
^ l*kere waM a certain Spirit, who had made light of the
evil of backbiting. I heard his slanders set forth in the
very worrlit he used; the persons he had defamed, and
those to whom he had carried his tales, were presented as
vividly as though actually present; yet every particular
ha<l ix;en sedulously concealed when he lived on EUurth.
^ Another Kpirit, who had defrauded a relation of his in-
h«;ritance, was convicted in the same way, and the letters
and papers, which had passed between them, were read in
my hearing, and I was told that not a word was omitted.
The same person shortly before his death poisoned his
ntsighbour, and the crime was thus brought to light. The
niurdercT appeared to dig a hole, out of which a man came
forth, and cried out, " What hast thou done to me?" Every
particuhir was then revealed ; the friendly conversation of
the niurderiT with his victim; how he gave him the cup;
the train of thoughts which led to the murder, and the cir-
ciiniHtanc.eH whicii took place afterwards. Immediately after
thrse diHcloHurcri lie was sentenced to Hell.
' In a word, all evils, wicked actions, robberies, artifices,
and deceits ttr(^ ho clearly exhibited to every Evil Spirit
(roni Ills own iiK^iiiory, that he is self-condemned ; nor is
thcn^ any room for denial, iHicause all the circumstances
a])p(*ar to^ethrr.
' When u MauV deedH arc discovered after death, the
Aii^cIm, who are in(iui8itors, look into his face, and extend
thrir exaiiiinatioii over his whole body, beginning with the
Itn^iTrt of rach hand. I was surprised at this, and the reason
wart tiiurt explained to me —
* Mvcry volition and thought of Jlan is inscribed on his
* Brain ; for volition and thought have their beginnings in
XOTHINQ FORGOTTEN, 411
the Brain^ whence they are conveyed to the bodily members,
wherein they terminate. Whatever therefore is in the
Mind is in the Brain, and from the Brain in the Body,
according to the order of its parts. Thus a Man writes his
life in his physique, and thus the Angels discover his
autobiography in his structure.*
^ A memorable circumstance confirmed me in the truth,
that the most minute particulars which enter the memory
remain and are never obliterated. I once saw some books
in the Spiritual World, and was told that they were compiled
from the memories of their authors, and that not one word
was omitted from the copies.
^ I am aware that these things will appear like paradoxes,
and be scarcely believed ; but nevertheless they are true.
Let no one therefore suppose, that anything which ho has
thought or done secretly, can remain hidden after death ;
but let him be assured, that every act and every thought
will then be exposed as in clear day. As the Lord said,
'*• There is nothing covered that shall not bo revealed ;
" neither hid that shall not be known. Therefore what-
^^ soever ye have spoken in darkness shall be heard in the
'^ light ; and that which ye have spoken in the ear in closets
'^ shall be proclaimed upon the house-tops. "t
As to punishments in the future life, Swedenborg makes
this remarkable statement —
' Punishments in the World of Spirits are of many kinds,
' but no one suffers for deeds done on P^arth. An Evil Spirit
* Hhakspere who knew, or at least observed, everything, makes Ulysses
8a V of CrcHsida —
'* Fie, fie upon her !
" There's a language in her eye, her check, her lip;
" Nny, herfooi gpeaki; her wautou spirits look out
" At every joint and motive of her body."
' Troilus and Cressida,^ Act iv., Scone 5.
t Nos. Iil2 and iOo , Luke xii., 2 and 0.
412 GATES OF HEAVEN.
IB only punished for the crimes he then and there commits.
Nevertheless, there is no actual difiPerence, whether it is said
that the Wicked are punished for their crimes on Earth,
or for the crimes they commit in the World of Spirits ;
because every one preserves his character through death,
and attempts to repeat the deeds done in the flesh.
^ Good Spirits are never punished, although they com-
mitted sins on Earth, because they have no wish to repeat
them. It has been revealed to me, that the wrong the
Good sometimes do, is not with any design against the
truth, nor out of an evil heart, but from hereditary impulse,
in moments of blind delight, when their inmost nature is
quiescent.'*
The World of Spirits lies between Heaven and Hell, and
appears as an undulating valley, flanked by mountains and
rocks. Every Society of Heaven and Hell has a gate open-
ing into the World of Spirits, which gates are hidden and
are found by no one, until the hour when he is ready to pass
to his final lot. The fact is, every Spirit as to his Ruling
Love is either in- Heaven or Hell — (as indeed we all are, even
here on Earth) — and by that Love, as by an invisible cord,
he is irresistibly drawn from out all entanglements (repre-
sented by the sojourn in the World of Spirits) into open
communion with the peculiar variety of Angel or Devil with
whom he is at heart radically associated.
' In the World of Spirits there appear ways, like the
' ways or roads of Earth ; some lead to Heaven and some
' lead to Hell ; but the ways which lead to Hell do not appear
' to those wlio go to Heaven, nor the ways which lead to
' Heaven to those who go to Ilell. Such ways are innume-
' rable, there being some which lead to every Society of
' Heaven, and to every Society of Hell. Every Spirit enters
* No. 509.
HOME FOR eternity! 413
' the way which leads to the Society of his Love, and does
* not see the ways which lead to any other.'*
When the probation of a Good Spirit is at an end, he
discovers the gate which leads to his place in Heaven. Ho
enters with joy and finds himself among Angels, who are in
nowise strange to him, whose faces are as friendly and
familiar as though he had known them from childhood, and
who welcome him as a brother. In the congenial air, he
breathes with a new sense of ease and peace ; he has come
among his veritable kindred; and in their society he finds
his occupation, and his happy and eternal home.f
When the period of an Evil Spirit is reached, he likewise
discovers the entrance which leads to his place in Hell. The
gates of Hell are only opened to such as are about to enter
them ; and they appear as dusky and sooty caverns, sloping
into the deep, from which exhale nauseous and fetid stenches.
* Evil Spirits relish these stenches as delightful ; for as
* every one on Earth is pleased with his own evil, so after
* death he is fond of the stench to which his evil corresponds.
* The Wicked, in this respect, may be compared to rapacious
* birds and beasts, such as ravens, wolves and swine, which
* gloat over carrion and dunghills. I once heard a certain
' Spirit utter a loud cry, as if seized with inward torture, on
' being struck with the fragrant effluvia of Heaven ; and
^ afterwards I saw him tranquil and glad in the effluvia of
' HelL't
The Hells lie everywhere beneath the surface of the
World of Spirits. The entrances to some, among the hills
and rocks, are wide and large, to others strait and narrow.
* * Divine Love and Wisdom,* No. 145.
f Thas 18 realized what Goethe imagined — ' In our Father's Kingdcm
* perhaps we shall be blessed with what here has been denied us, to know one
* another merely by seeing one another, and thence more thoroughly to love
* one another.' Quoted in Mr. Lewes's ' Life of Ooethej* p. 519, cd. of 1864.
t No. 429.
414 HEATSHLY 80GIEIT.
and many of them rugged. Others, in the plains, are like
dens and pits, chasms and whirlpools, bogs and stagnant
waters. None are seen until a Spirit is ready to go to Hell,
when he disappears down one of these entrances anddst an
exhalation of fire and smoke and stench. As a Gk>od Spirit
finds his place among kindred Angels, so an Evil Spirit finds
his place among kindred Devils.
It will be said, Why this World of Spirits is but a new
version of old Purgatory I So indeed it seems to me ; but
Swedenborg in the fervour of his Swedish Protestantism
would cut himself off from the weighty sanction of Catho-
licism. ^ With regard to Purgatory,' he says, ^ I can aver
^ that it is a pure Babylonish fiction, invented for the sake
' of gain, and that no such place does or can exist.'* Much
nonsense and falsehood may have been spoken of Purgatory,
but there need be no question, that Purgatory and the World
of Spirits are one and the same.
The Heavens.
The Societies of Heaven.
Heaven is composed of innumerable Societies of Angels,
some large and some small ; the large consist of myriads of
Angels, the small of some thousands, and the least of some
hundreds. The bond of these Societies is similarity of
character ; the Angels who are like each other dwell together ;
those who are imlike dwell apart, and far or near apart
according to the degree of their unlikeness.
The Angels of each Society associate according to the
same law : those who excel in goodness cluster together as
the crown and centre of the Society ; and those who are
round about are distant from the centre according to the
degree in which their excellence diminishes. The arrange-
• * ApocoHypm Revdata^^ No. 784, and repeated ' Vera Christiana Rdigio^'
No. 476.
AFFINITIES IN HEAVEN. 415
ment of a Society in this respect, may be compared to light
decreasing from its origin to its circumference.
When Angels are in company with their like, they are
in the freedom and joy of their life. Few therefore venture
abroad beyond their own Society ; for to go out from their
own Society is like going out of themselves, or into an
atmosphere straitened and uncongenial. To such an extent
is this the case, that when some inferior Angels ascended to
a superior Society they were unable to see anybody, although
they looked about on every side, and although they were
surrounded by a multitude ; soon too, they were seized with
such anguish of heart, that they hardly knew whether they
were dead or alive ; and, with all speed, flew back to the
Heaven from whence they came, glad to rejoin their comrades,
and vowing never again to aspire to regions beyond their
province. The same happens when an Angel descends from
a higher Society to a lower : * he is deprived of his wisdom,
' stammers in his speech, and is filled with despair.'*
All the relationships of Earth, which are not based on
similarity of character, are dissolved in the Spiritual World.
' They who pass from the World of Spirits into Heaven or
' Hell, know each other no more, and see each other no more,
* unless they are of similar disposition from similar loves.'f
' Of ten who were brothers on Earth, five may be in Hell
^ and five in Heaven, and all in different Societies, and if one
' met another they would have no sense of their earthly
^ relationship. Natural aflUnities perish after death, and are
' succeeded by spiritual affinities.'^ On this principle
Swcdenborg settles the oft-asked question, ' Shall we know
' each other in the Future Life ?' We shall, if we possess
kindred hearts ; if not, we shall be separated, and moreover
have no desire for acquaintance. To most therefore — with
• No8. 35 and 209. f No. 427 ; and ^ApocalypaU Ej-plUata,' No. 4G.
t ' Doetrina de Charitate,* No. 26.
416 NO SAMENESS IN HEAVEN.
the exception perhaps of a short meeting in the World of
Spirits — death must be an everlasting, though, rightly con-
sidered, not a mournful farewell.
The Angels of a Society possess a general resemblance
of physiognomy, just as if they were members of one family,
only the resemblance is more perfect than anything seen on
Earth—
* It was shewn me how the general resemblance is par-
* ticularly varied in the individuals of one Society. There
* appeared to me a face like that of an Angel, which was
* varied according to the affections of goodness and truth
^ in one Society. The variations continued a long time, and
^ I observed that the same general countenance continued as
^ the common plane, and that the rest of the faces were only
* derivations and propagations from it.'*
Though the Angels of a Society are like each other,
there is no identity, no sameness —
* The Hell of one is never exactly like that of another,
* nor is the Heaven of one the same as the Heaven of another.
* No two Men, no two Devils, no two Angels are exactly
* alike. When I only thought of two being exactly alike
* or equal, the Angels expressed horror. 'f
* There is not moreover one heavenly Society, nor any
* two in a Society, who in matters of faith are entirely at
* one with each other in opinion.'} All receive the Divine
Wisdom in diverse manner and measure, and in myriads
of myriads of forms reflect the infinity of the Divine
Intelligence.
Three Heavens,
The Angelic Host is divided into Three Heavens, per-
fectly distinct from each other — an Inmost or Third, a
Middle or Second, and an Outmost or First Heaven.
* No. 47. t Non. 66 and 405. X * Arcana Ccekttia: No. 3,267.
THREE HEAVENS. 417
The Angels of the Third or Highest Heaven are called
Celestial. They loTe the Lord supremely and He fills their
hearts with His love. They are in innocence, in token
whereof they go naked. They are the Will of Heaven.
They recognize truth by a sure instinct, and have therefore
no need of reasoning, but do what is right spontaneously.
They are of those to whom the promise is made by the
Lord in Jeremiah — ^^ I will put my law in their inward parts,
^^ and write it in their hearts ; and they shall teach no more
^^ every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, say-
^^ ing, Know Jehovah ; for they shall all know me from the
" least unto the greatest."*
The Angels of the Second or Middle Heaven are called
Spiritual. Their affection is for the Divine Wisdom rather
than for the Divine Love. They are the Litellect of Heaven,
and their joy is to receive and discuss truths ere they reduce
them to practice. They are as far inferior to the Celestial
Angels as Wisdom is inferior to Goodness, Intellect to Will,
Light to Heat.
The Angels of the First or Ultimate Heaven are called
Natural. They are the Body of Heaven, and may be
described as Obedient Angels. They do what is right
because it is suggested by Goodness or conunanded by
Wisdom, and find pleasure and peace in their duty; but
^ whilst they live according to the rules of morality, and
^ believe in a Divine Being, have no particular concern for
* improvement.' t
Two Kingdoms of Heaven.
Viewed in another aspect the Angelic Host appears as
Two Kingdoms — one called the Celestial and the other the
Spiritual Kingdom.
The Brain, as the representative of the Mind, is, we
* Jurcmiah »xi. 88 and 84. f No. 38.
2 E
418 TWO KINQD0M8.
know, Bhared between the Will and the Intellect, and the
Body, as projected from and dependent on the Brain, is
related in each of its parts, organs and members to the Will
or to the Intellect. The Heart in the Body is the grand
representative of the Will and the Lungs of the Intellect,
and it would be easy, if necessary, to go over the whole
Body and assign this function to the kingdom of the Will
and that to the kingdom of the Understanding.
Just so with the Heavens. The Third Heaven is as the
Will and the Second Heaven as the Intellect in the Brainy
and the Outmost Heaven is as tbe Body apportioned be^
tween them. Thus it is, that the Three Heavens constitute
Two Kingdoms.*
In Men there are two marked divisions — Men of Love
and Men of Truth ; the one living and acting from predomi-
nance of Will, and the other from predominance of Under-
standing. Translated to Heaven, they range themselves in
Two Kingdoms ; the higher of each division acting as the
Brain and the lower as the Body.
The existence and order of the Three Heavens and Two
Kingdoms were represented in the Courts of the Temple at
Jerusalem. There were Three Courts, and the Outer Court
was two-fold, signifying its division and relation to the
Inmost and Inner Courts. Oberlin, who was a reader of
•
^ Heaven and Hell^^ had a plan of the Temple hung on the
wall of his church, and taught his hearers, that according to
the degree of their regeneration would be their place in thd
Heavenly Kingdoms.
* All perfection increases towards the interiors, and de-
^ creases towards the exteriors, because interior things are
' nearer to the Divine, and in themselves purer ; but exterior
' things are more remote from the Divine, and in themselves
^ grosser. Hence the perfection of the Celestial Angels
• Not. 94 to 97, and 'ArcatM CaU$tia,' No. 9,741.
HEAVEN 18 A MAN. 419
^ inunenselj exceeds the perfection of the Spiritual, and the
^ perfection of the Spiritual that of the Natural Angels.'*
The Celestial Angels form the Priestly Kingdom of the
Lord, and in the Word are styled His Habitation. The
Spiritual Angels form His Begal Kingdom, and in the
Word are styled His Throne. On Earth the Lord was
called Jesus from the celestial aspect and Christ from the
spiritual.
* From places of instruction in the World of Spirits,
novitiate Angels pass to their homes in the Heavens by
eight ways, four of which lead to the Celestial and four to
the Spiritual Kingdom. The ways which lead to the
Celestial Kingdom ascend eastwards, and are lined with
olives and fruit trees of many kinds : the ways which lead
to the Spiritual Kingdom ascend westwards, and are
adorned with vines and laurels : and this because vines and
laurels correspond to the affection of truth and its uses,
whilst olives and fruit trees answer to the affection of good
and its uses.'f
The Universal Heaven is a Man.
The Angels, classified with exquisite nicety according to
their varieties of character, in combination form a Grand or
Divine Man.
^ This is an arcanum as yet unknown on Earth, though
*mo8t perfectly in the Heavens, where it constitutes the
^ chief science of the Angels and a means of vast intelligence.
^ Heaven is distinguished like the Human Body into
^ parts and members, and the Angels know to which function
*' every Society belongs ; and hence they say, that so and so
^ is in the Head, or Breast, or Loins, or Hands, or Feet.
^ The Angels do not see Heaven as a Man, for it is im-
^ possible for the Universal Heaven to fall under the view of
» No. 34. , t No. 520.
2 E 2
420 A SOCIETT IS A MAN.
' any indiTidnal ; but thej sometimes see a remote Society,
^ consisting of many thousands, in the Human Form.
* As every Angel is a Man, so every Society of Angels is
^ a ^lan, and all Societies of Heaven together form the Grand
* Man.'»
We have here a new illustration of Swedenborg^s old
and £ivourite dogma, that the Method of Nature is every-
where the same ; that what is true of the least is true of the
largest ; and that the Philosopher must take care never to
be misled by size into supposing difference.
The assertion, that each Society of Angels and the
Universal Heaven are in the Human Form, is usually cited
against Swedenborg as the very height of mystidsm or
absurdity. Nevertheless, nothing is more credible when
reasonably stated.
What indeed can a Society of Men or Angels be, other
than an enlarged Man ? What is any Society, but an Indi-
vidual magnified ?
A solitary Man would do everything for himself, pain-
fully and imperfectly ; but when he finds neighbours, they
share with him the business of existence, and in co-operation
toil is diminished and comforts multiplied. In Society it is
discovered, that each Individual has some special skill or
strength, and to each is assigned some function answering
thereto. The business which the solitary Man roughly
attempted to overtake is detailed amongst a multitude of
hands, and is accomplished with a fullness and perfection
impossible to any single pair. Thus in Society, a Man's
fellows practically say to him, ^^ Do your best for us and we
^^ shall do our best for you ;" and as Society enlarges and
the division of labour extends to minutiae, the Individual is
redeemed more and more from the misery and drudgeiy of
solitude. Man verily is a social being !
• Not. 51 to 67.
EACH NATION IS A MAN. 421
Is it not therefore manifest, that Society is nothing else
than the reconstruction and developement of Man on a largo
scale ? Society does nothing, Society can do nothing, which
does not lie in germ, at least, in every Individual. In
Society the finest faculty of each Individual is sought out
and set to work (to speak ideally of Earth but actually of
Heaven) ; and by the appointment of the peculiar strength
and skill of each to its appropriate use, a new big Man is
built up, excellent at every point.
Thus Swedenborg is to be understood, when he asserts
that Heaven, and each Society of Heaven, is in the Human
Form ; and by no means limiting the assertion to the
Angelic World —
' The whole Human Race, the men of a Kingdom, of a
* Province, of a City, and of a Household, are each in the
* Lord's view a Man ; not,' he cautiously observes, * that the
* Men themselves so appear togetlter^ but the t^e* which they
* perform in association are the uses of one Man. . . . Hence
* it is evident, that all the English appear before the Lord
^ as One Man ; likewise all the Dutch, all the Germans, all
* the Swedes and Danes, also the French, the Spaniards, the
^ Poles, the Russians ; either as Man- Angels or Man-Devils,
* according to the character of their uses.'*
We must be careful in reading Swedenborg's ascription
of the Human Form to Society, not to confound Form with
Shape, and thereby overturn his science into nonsense.
Form we attribute indifferently to Mind and Matter, but
Shape solely to Matter. The Mind is in the Human Form,
the Brain is in the Human Form, but neither is in the Human
Shape, though the Body, which is in the Human Shape, is
derived from the Mind through the Brain, and in every
nerve, tissue and particle corresponds to and expresses
something existing in its Unseen Mental Origin. Form,
* ' Divine Love and Wisdoin^^ from ' Apocal}fpae Explained.*
i22 H0BBE8 OK THE SOCIAL MAS.
Swedenborg defines «a application to Uae ; and wherever,
therefore, he finds any fiinetion in Hind or Sodety corres-
ponding, for instuiee, to that of the Eye or the Hand in the
Body, he identifies that mental or sodal function with the
Eye or liand. If the Uses are similar, he gives them the
same name, however diverse in appearance — though one be
an effort of the invisible Kind, anoth^ the edict of a
Statesman, and another the march of an Army. In the
Universe — the Macrocosm — ^he assores us there is nothing
which has not its analogue in the Body of Man — the Micro-
cosm« Uence therefore when he asserts that an association
like the House of Commons is in the Human Form he does
not mean, what is manifestly untrue, that it is in the Human
Shape, but that functions correijxmding to those of the
Human Body are repeated by the Commons on another
scale, and on another plane of existence. The leaders of
the House fulfil the same Use as the Brain in the Body, and
their followers the same Uses as the subordinate organs and
members ; and moreover, just so far as the House complies
with the pattern of a perfect and healthy human organism,
is the possibility of its efficiency ; and just so far as it falls
short of that pattern, is its existence maimed or diseased.
IIobbcH is not a philosopher to whom we should resort
for spiritual instruction, but he saw clearly that a Conmion-
wcalth was an enlargement of Man, or, as he atheistically
puts it, ^ A n Artificial Man.' In his introduction to ^Leviaihan^^
publifiluul ill !($/>!, ho observes that Nature is the art by
which (lod iniulo the World, which art Man has sometimes
iiiiitiittMl ill luiUcIng a kind of Artificial Animal. Such, in
hiM opinion, H Watch may be esteemed ; for, says he, What
in tho hcMirt hut n spring, the nerves but so many strings,
lUhl tho joints hut so many wheels? The art of Man, he
ttthU, hiu ijfonc yet further, and attempted no less than
Miitliin^ a rcrtonihhmcc of the most perfect work of Nature,
whli'h is Man- * For by art is created that great Leviathan
PAUL ON THE CHURCH AS A MAN. 428
called a Commonwealth or State (in Latin Civitaa)^ which
is but an Artificial Man, though of greater stature and
strong^, in which the Sovereignty is an Artificial Soul, as
giving life and motion to the whole Body ; the Magistrates
and other oflScers of judicature and execution, Artificial
Joints ; reward and punishment (by which, fastened to the
fear of the Sovereignty, every joint and member is moved
to perform its duty) are the Nerves that do the same in the
Body Natural ; the wealth and riches of all the particular
Members are the strength {Salus Populi) and people's
safety ; Counsellors, by whom all things needful for it to
know are suggested to it, are the memory ; equity and
laws, the artificial Reason and Will ; concord, health ;
sedition, sickness ; and civil war, death. Lastly, the pacts
and covenants, by which the piers of the Body Politic were
at first made, set together and united, resemble that Jiat^ or
the Let us make Man^ pronounced by God in the creation.'
This doctrine of the correspondence between Society
and the Human Body is as ancient as thought, and indeed
underlies all speech concerning Society. The old fable of
the Belly and the Members is a fine illustration of the
universal sense of its truth, and St. Paul never reasons
more vigourously and persuasively than when he tells the
Ephesians, ' We are members of Christ's Body, of His flesh,
' and of His bones ;' and the Corinthians, ' Know ye not that
' your bodies are members of Christ ? He that is joined
' unto the Lord is one spirit. Ye are the Body of Christ,
' and members in particular. The Body is not one, but
* many : there be many members, but one Body. The eye
* cannot say unto the hand, I have no need of thee ; nor can
* the head to the feet, I have no need of you. If one
' member suffer, all the members suff'cr with it ; or if one
' member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it.' And
to the Romans, ' For as we have many members in one
* body, and all members have not the same office, so we,
424 ORIGIN OF MANHOOD.
'being many, are one Body in Christ, and every one
' members one of another/*
These analogies, Swedenborg convinces- us, are by no
means fancifnl, but that the Church, whose life is Christ, is
as veritably a Man as to Form (that is to say, as to the
relation and connection of the Uses of its Members) as any
structure of flesh and bones which we dignify with the title
of Humanity.
Thus in the Human Form, the Angels find the plan of
their Society, of their Heaven, and of the Universe of
Heavens; and know, precisely their place in the Grand
Human Economy, and find all their joy in the futhful
exercise of their own little function there.
Why Heaven is a Man.
Heaven is in the Human Form because the Lord, who is
the Life of Heaven, is a Man. ' It is common for the Angels
to say, that the Lord alone is a Man, and that they are
Men from Him, and that every one is a Man in so far as he
receives and manifests the Lord.
* No Angel in all the Heavens ever perceives the Divine
in any other than the Human Form ; and what is wonderful,
they who are in the superior Heavens are not able to think
of the Divine otherwise. Hence the wiser the Angels are,
the more clearly they perceive, that God is in a Human
Form.'t
Swedenborg thus resolves Heaven and Humanity into
God — the Lord. Angels and Men are in themselves dead
husks, but vivified by the Divine Presence. The Lord is
the All in All of Heaven — of Mankind. Heaven is not
Heaven from the Angels, but from the Lord. Wisdom and
• Ephesians v., 26.; I. Corinthians, ri., 15, 17 and xii., 14 to 31 ; and
Romans xii., 4, 5.
t Xo0. 78 to 80.
CHARACTER AND CIRCUMSTANCE. 426
Love are no more than the Lord manifest in the Angel — the
Man. ^ In Heaven to love the Lord does not mean to love
^ Him as to Person, but to love the Goodness and Truth
* which are from Him'* — that is to say, to worship Him as
manifest in His Creatures. The Angels clearly perceiving
that they can do no good nor think any truth of them-
selves, and that the love in their hearts and the wisdom in
their understandings are the Lord's in them, disown aU
merit, all self-righteousness.
^ Spirits who arrogate merit and righteousness are not
^ received into Heaven. The Angels avoid them as stupid
^ and as thieves ; as stupid because they do not know, that
^ of themselves they are lifeless, and as thieves because they
* rob the Lord of what is His.'f
We shall have further occasion to speak of Swedenborg's
exposition of the mystery of consciousness and of the
transfer of freedom and personality from the Creator to the
Creature, and here content ourselves with the simple state-
ment of the fact, that Heaven in its innumerable myriads of
forms of manhood and womanhood, in its love and its
wisdom, its joy and its brightness, derives all at every
instant from the Lord.
We now turn to a description of the external order and
appearance of the Heavens.
Swedenborg tells us, that an Angel or a Devil dwells
in circumstances corresponding in every particular to his
spiritual character, and varied at every instant with the
alternations of that character. What a Spirit is the Spirit
sees; insides and outsides, the unseen and the seen evermore
perfectly harmonize. Hence, in a word, Heaven is loveli-
ness, and Hell is ugliness.
In the following pages we shall do no more than supply
« No. 15. t Nos. S, 0 and 10.
326 THE auir of hejctkh.
a few illttstrations of this great Law of Correspondence
between Character and Appearance.
The Sun of Heaven.
Since the Lord is the Life of the Angels, He perforce
appears before them ar their Sun ; what He is within, He is
manifest without. Li the Wills of the Angels, He is love,
and in their Un^derstandings, He is wisdom ; and this inner
fact, transferred to the sphere of vision, results in His
appearance as the Sun of Heaven, whose heat corresponds
to each AngePs love, and whose light corresponds to each
Angel's wisdom. Every Angel dwells in just such heat and
light as answers to his love and wisdom.
' To every one the Sun appears differently, even as every
one receives the Lord differently. To the Celestial Angels,
the Sun appears fiery and flaming ; to the Spiritual Angels,
white and brilliant; the one Kingdom receiving more of
the Divine Good and the other more of the Divine Truth.
Goodness and Truth are not two but one in the Lord, but
are separated in the Angels. The most perfect Angels
are those, who receive His Love and Wisdom in equal
measure.'*
As to the existence of the Spiritual Sun, Swedenborg
cites his own experience —
^ That the Lord really appears in Heaven as a Sun, has
^ not only been revealed to me by Angels, but also on several
^ occasions by actual sight.
^ The light of Heaven far exceeds the mid-day light of
^ our Earth. I have often seen it, even in the time of even-
^ ing and night, and can testify that the light of our Natural
•^ Sun is as shade in comparison. Its whiteness and bright-
^ ness surpass all description.' t
• Nos. 118 and 188.
t Noi. 118 and 136; and *Areana Odeatia,' Nos. 1,531 and 7,173.
THE BUN AND THE ANGELS. 427
The LfOrd is also seen by the Angels at times in ah
angelic form. He possesses an Angel with His Spirit, so
that the private consciousness of the Angel is subdued, and
the Angel speaks as the Lord, and is seen and heard hy the
Angels as the Lord.
^ I have seen the Lord in an angelic form out of the Sun,
^ and a little beneath it at a great altitude, and also near
^ at hand with a resplendent countenance ; and once as a
' flaming beam in the midst of the Angels.'*
The Sun of Heaven does not appear above the head, or
in the zenith, but before the faces of the Angels at an angle
of 45°; nor does the Sun move from that position, but
remains steadily fixed in the East, as the common centre
whence all direction and determination are derived.t
The Angels of the Celestial Kingdom, who dwell pecu-
liarly in the Sun's warmth, spread themselves in their ranks
from the East to the West, declining in love as they recede
westwards. The Angels of the Spiritual Kingdom, whose
peculiar joy is the light, spread themselves in their ranks
from the South to the North, declining in wisdom as they
recede northwards.
The order of Earth is inverted in Heaven; here the
centre of gravity is the centre of the Earth ; there the
centre of attraction is the Sun. As in this World, however
we move, our bodies remain steadUy related to the centre of
the Earth, so in Heaven, however an Angel may turn, the
Sun in the East is constantly before his face.
' The Angels have the East before them whithersoever
* they turn. They bend their faces and bodies in every
' direction like Men, but the East is always before their
' eyes.
^ That tlie Angels have the Lord constantly before theiii
^ has been made known to me by much experience ; but
« Nos. b5y 79 and 121. f Nos. tl8 and 124.
428 SSASOHS IN HEAVEK. «
^ whenever I have been in company with the Angela^ the
'Lord has been sensibly present before my face, not seen
' indeed, but perceived in light.
' That there is snch a turning to the Lord, is one of the
' wonders of Heaven ; for it is possible for many Angels to
' be in the same place, and one may turn his hce and body
' in one direction, and another in another, and yet all see the
' Lord before them ; and every one have the South on his
' right hand, the North on his left, and the West behind.**
Times and Seasons mth the Angels.
Heaven has its Times and Seasons, but not with the
uniformity of Earth. In Heaven there is no bleak winter,
and no dark night; but there is brightness and there is
dullness, there is spring and summer, morning, and noon,
and evening, all produced by, and answering to, similar
alternations in the minds of the Angels.
^The Angels are not constantly in the same state of
' love, nor, consequently, of wisdom. Sometimes they are
' in a state of intense love, and sometimes in a state of love
' not so intense, decreasing by degrees from its greatest to
* its least intensity. When they are in the greatest degree
' of love, they are in the light and heat of their life, or in
' their brightness and delight ; but when they are in the
' least degree, they are in shade or cold, or in their state of
' dimness and apathy, from which they rise again by degrees
* to their former height of joy. These states do not succeed
* each other uniformly, but with variety, like the variations
' of light and shade, heat and cold, which change with
* perpetual variety within our natural year.'t
The Angels say these changes do not originate in the
Sun, who is ever the same, but in themselves, and indicate
a partial relapse from love into self-love. In their states of
« Nos. 143 and 144. f No. Id5.
NO CLOCKS IN HEAVEN. 429
dimness, when the Sun becomes as a Moon, they are
renewedly convinced that there is no joy apart from the
Lord.
^ When the Angels are in their last state, which is when
* left to self-love, they begin to be sad. I have conversed
^ with them when in that state, and have seen their sadness ;
^but they said that they hoped soon to return to their
^ pristine love, and thus as it were again into Heaven ; for
* it is Heaven to them to be withheld from self-love.'*
Moreover, without such changes even heavenly life
would lose its zest. Eternal uniformity would lapse into
eternal misery ; life would be weariness, and sleep unto
death welcome in a land of flat unvaried pleasantness.
Heaven is Human Nature beatified, and in Heaven, Human
Nature has its every desire satisfied, and variety or change
is not the least of its necessities.
No Time in Heaven*
There are no clocks in Heaven. What we In the World
call Time, marked into days by the reel of the Earth on its
axis and into years by its race round the Sun, is unknown
to the Angels. Outside themselves they have no gauge for
Time. Day and its brightness lasts as long as they are in
delight, and evening prevails as their delight subsides. Time
is subject to them, and not they to Time ; the only clocks
are their hearts ; by their states alone reckoning is kept, and
their days are merely the measure of their desires.
^ Events succeed each other in Heaven as on Earth, but
^ the Angels have no notion or idea of Time external to
' themselves. They do not even know what is meant by a
* year, a month, a week, a day, an hour, to-day, to-morrow,
' yesterday ; and when they hear them named by Man, they
« No. 160; and •Jruwa CKle9tia,' Nog. 694, 731, 1,028, 1,044, 9,334-86,
and 9,4.02-54.
430 MIKD <jK)yESN8 TIME.
^ translate them into States of SGnd. Hence it is that Times
* in the Word signify States.'*
All this may appear very strange, but it flows as an
inevitable consequence from the law which subordinates the
phenomena of the Spiritual World to the Mind of the Angel
' — or the Devil. Our life here moreover will supply many
indications of the truth of what Swedenborg tells us. How
short an hour is when passed with a pleasant friend, and
how long an hour is when passed on the rack of anxiety !
Yet we must know, that sixty minutes, independently of the
Mind, are never longer or shorter. * Jacob served seven
^ years for Rachel, and they seemed unto him but a few
* days, for the love he had to her.* Our real life is altogether
above the vicissitudes of days and years ; we are old as our
hearts wither with selfishness, and ever young as they grow
tender and true.
' Since the Angels have no idea of Time, they have a
* different idea of Eternity from what is entertained on
* Earth. Eternity is perceived by them as Infinite State,
^ not as Infinite Time. I was once thinking about Eternity,
* and by the idea of Time I could perceive what was meant
* by To Eternity^ namely, existence without end ; but I could
* form no conception of what was From Eternity^ and there-
^fore none of what God had done from Eternity before
^ Creation. When anxiety arose in my mind on this account,
^ I was elevated into the sphere of Heaven, and thus into
' that perception of Eternity in which the Angels are, and
^ then I was enlightened to see, that Eternity must not be
* thought of from Time, but from State ; and thus a percep-
* tion of From Eternity was communicated to me.'t
• Nos. 162 and 165.
t No. 167. 'I once thought of the essence and omnipresence of God
* from Eternity, that is of CM before the creation of the Earth ; and because
' I ooald not remoTe Spaces and Times from my thoughts, I was brought into
HEAVENLT TRAVELUNa. 481
No Space in Heaven*
As there is no Time in Heaven there is no Space ; there
are appearances of Space, just as on Earth, but instead of
being fixed, they arc altogether subject to the Minds of the
Angels. The distance between London and Melbourne is
fixed beyond the influence of the Mind, and a friend in the
one city, however ardently he may desire to meet a friend
in the other, will consume a certain number of days in the
passage; but in Heaven the case is quite otherwise; the
hot desire in Heaven would annihilate the appearance of
distance.
* When an Angel goes from one place to another he
^ arrives sooner when he is ardent, and later when he is
' indifferent ; the way, whilst it remains the same, being
* shortened or lengthened for him, in accordance with the
^ force of his impulse. This I have often seen, and wondered
* that it should be so.'*
The appearances of Space in the Spiritual World indicate
nothing but differences of character ; and hence it is, that
those who are of kindred mind dwell together, and those
who are of dissimilar mind apart ; and the extent of
characteristic difference is represented in corresponding
separation as to Space. Nothing can overcome these dis-
tances in the Spiritual World but sympathy. Between
Heaven and Hell a great gulf is fixed. Angel and Devil
can seldom meet, nor even Angels of different regions inter-
mingle without suffering. The widest spaces of Earth any
one may traverse, but the spaces of the Spiritual World
' anxiety ; for tbo idea of Nature entered instead of God : bat it was said to
' me, ** Remove the ideas of Time and Space, and yon will see." I did s<^
' and then I saw ; and from that time forth I was enabled to think of God
*from Eternity/ * I>e Amore OanJugiaUt* No. 328.
• No. 195.
4S2 ASGELS' HOirSESL
are impaaaaUe Mve to a murcml srmpathj, wliidi^ we
^prehend^ few or none possess.
' Hence it may be seen, that although there are Spaces
' in Heaven as real as on Earthy vet nothing in Hearen is
' measured bj Space, but bv States of Mind ; and no notion
' or idea of Space, apart from Mind« can enter the thoughts
* of the Angels.'*
The scenery of Heaven being thus plastic to the Minds
of the Angels, it need not be concluded^ that it has little
permanence. There is as mudi fixity in heavenlj scenery as
there is in angelic diaracter ; and angelic character having
emerged from the turmoil and probation of Earth, has
entered into peace and assurance for ever. Yet even in the
light of our transitory earthly experience we may know, that
character in its essential structure changes slowly, if at all,
and were its perturbations displayed in Nature, they would
be represented by doud and sunshine^ cold and heat, wind
and rain, rather by cataclysms, by deluge and earthquake.
Even so the basis of an AngeFs character is repeated in the
gp^oundwork of his landscape, and the variations of his
thoughts and feelings in superficial phenomena thereupon.
Tie Homes of the AngeU.
^ Whenever I have conversed with the Angels mouth to
mouth, I have been present with them in their houses, which
are exactly like those of Earth, but more beautiful. They
contain chambers, parlours, and bed rooms in great num-
bers, courts also, and around them gardens, shrubberies,
and fields.
^ Wliere Angels live in society, their houses are arranged
in the form of a dty, with streets, lanes, and squares,
exactly like the dties on our Earth. It has been granted
nio to walk through them, and to look about on every side,
• Nos. 195 and 198.
ARCHITECTURE AND FURNITURE. 433
and occasionally to enter the houses. This occurred when
I was wide awake, and when mj inner eyes were opened.
^ I have seen palaces in Heaven magnificent hejond de-
scription. Their upper parts were refulgent, as if they were
pure gold, and their lower parts as if they were precious
stones. Some were more splendid than others, and the
splendour without was equalled by the magnificence within.
The rooms were ornamented as neither language nor science
can adequately describe. On the south were paradises in
which all things were in like manner glorious. In some
places the leaves of the trees were like silver and the fruits
like gold. The colours of the flowers, which were arranged
in beds, were like rainbows. The grounds were contiguous
to other palaces, which terminated the view.
^ The Architecture of Heaven is such, that one might say
it is the very Art itself; nor is this to be wondered at^
because that Art is indeed from Heaven.
^ The Angels said that such things, and innumerable
others still more perfect, are presented before their eyes
by the Lord, but that nevertheless they delight their minds
more than their eyes, for in all they discern correspondences
of things Divine.'*
The houses and furniture of the Angels vary from
simplicity to magnificence, according to their owner's intelli-
gence and usefulness, and consequent dignity. Houses in
Heaven are not constructed by hand like houses on Earth,
but are created by the Lord for each Angel through each
Angel's character. There is nothing, indeed, in any angelic
mansion which does not correspond to something in the
Mind of the householder.
Swedenborg has much to say in many places of the
glories of the Heavens, but his descriptions usually run in
commonplaces concerning gorgeous architecture and up-
• Not. 184 and 186.
2 F
\
434 COMPLETE MEN AND WOMEN. .
holsterj in gold and silver and precious stones, and para-
discs after Dutch patterns. He is a poor hand at painting
ccIeBtial scenery, but a lively imagination may find abundant
scope and warrant for working from the principles he lays
down.
* The Angels of the Lord's Celestial Kingdom dwell, for
' the most part, on mountains ; those of the Spiritual King-
^ dom on hills ; and the Angels of the lowest parts of Heaven
* in rocky places.
' There are also Angels who do not live in Societies, but
^ in separate houses and families. These dwell in the midst
' of Heaven, and are the best of the Angels.'*
The Angels are Men and Women.
It is scarcely necessary to state, what has all along been
asserted or assumed, that Death works no change whatever
on Human Nature, beyond the destruction of the material
bodv, and that Men and Women awake in the World of
Spirits so perfectly themselves, so completely Men and
Women, that it often requires some effort to realize the fact
that they have risen from Earth to Spirit.
' From all my experience, which has now continued for
^ many years, I can declare and solemnly affirm, that the
* Angelic Form is in every respect Human ; that Angels
^ have faces, eyes, ears, breasts, arms, hands and feet ; that
^ they see, hear, and converse with each other, and, in a
* word, lack no external attribute of Man, except the mate-
* rial body.
* I have seen Angels in their own light, which exceeds
* by many degrees the noon-day light of Earth, and in that
^ light I have observed all parts of their faces more distinctly
^ and clearly than ever I did the faces of Men on Earth.
^ It has also been granted me to see an Angel of the
• Nos. 50, 188. 189 and 207.
NOTHING LACKING. 435
' Inmost Heaven. His countenance was brighter and more
' resplendent than the faces of the Angels of the Outer
' Heavens. I examined him closely, and found him a Man
' in all perfection.' *
Again he testifies —
' A Man is equally a Man after Death, and a Man so
' perfectly, that he knows no other, than that he is still on
^ Earth. He sees, hears and speaks as on Earth ; he walks,
^ runs and sits as on Earth ; he eats and drinks as on
' Earth ; he sleeps and wakes as on Earth ; he enjoys sexual
^ delights as on Earth ; in short, he is a Man in general and
' every particular as on Earth, whence it is plain, that Death
' is a continuation of Life, and a mere transit to another
' plane of being.' f
Nevertheless the difference between the life of Earth and
of Heaven is great, for the senses of the Angels are far
more exquisite than those of Men.^ All that we have and
enjoy, the Angels have and enjoy, but in a delicacy and
perfection far beyond our gross and sluggish perceptions.
Verily 'Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have
' entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath
' prepared for them that love Him.'
The Beauty of the Angels.
The Angels are forms of love, and their beauty is
ineffable. Love beams from their countenances, inspires
their speech, and vivifies their every action.
From every Spirit (and indeed from every Man) there
emanates a sphere, an air, an aura impregnated with his
life, and by which his quality is made sensible. This aroma,
« No. 75.
t 'Ckmiinuatio de Ultimo Judiao,* No. 82 ; and */>< Codo et de Inferno,'
No. 461.
t No. 402
2 F 2
436 AGE 18 YOUTH.
this atmosphere, in the case of the Angels, is so fall of love,
that it affects the inmost life of all who draw near them.
^ I have/ says Swedenborg, ^ sometimes perceived the
spheres of the Angels and have been most tenderly and
deeply touched thereby.
^ The Human Form of every Angel is beautiful in pro-
portion to his love of Divine Truth and subjection thereto.
The Angels of the Inmost Heaven are consequently the
most beautiful; for spiritual perfection increases towards the
centre of Heaven and decreases towards the circumference.
^ I have seen faces of Angels of the Third Heaven which
were so lovely, that no painter, with the utmost power of
his art, could depict even a thousandth part of their light
and life ; but the faces of the Angels of the Lowest Heaven
might, in some measure, be represented.
^ They who are in Heaven are continually advancing to
the spring-time of life, and the more thousands of years
they live, the more delightful and happy is the spring to
which they attain. Good women, who have died worn out
with age, come after a while more and more into the flower
of youth, and into a loveliness, which exceeds all concep-
tions of beauty which can be formed from what the eye has
seen. Goodness moulds their forms into its own image,
and causes the countenance to beam with grace and sweet-
ness. Some who have beheld them have been overwhelmed
with astonishment.
' In fine, to grow old in Heaven is to grow young ^ ♦
Marriage in Heaven*
Death leaving Human Nature unaffected, leaves Sex
unaffected. Angels are Men and Women with all the
passions of Men and Women, and consequently Marriage
is the rule of Heaven.
• No8. 17, 414 and 459.
WEDLOCK IN HEAVEN. 437
^ Marriage in the Heavens is the conjunction of two into
* one Mind.
' The Mind consists of two parts — the Understanding
and the Will ; and when these act in unity, they are
called one Mind. In Heaven, the Husband acts as the
Understanding and the Wife as the Will : each has an
Understanding and a Will, but in the Husband, the
Understanding predominates, and in the Wife, the Will ;
and character is determined by the faculty which pre-
dominates.
^ In Angelic Marriage there is no predominance : the
Will of the Wife is the Will of the Husband, and the
Understanding of the Husband is the Understanding of
the Wife. Each loves to will and think as the other wills
and thinks. The Will of the Wife enters into the Will of
the Husband and the Understanding of the Husband into
the Understanding of the Wife. Thus are their Minds
conjoined — actually conjoined, so that married partners
are not called two, but One Angel.
* This conjunction of Minds descending into the Body is
* felt as love, and that love, conjugal love.'*
From the cohabitation of Angels no children are bom|
but instead their union is thereby perfected, and their love
and intelligence increased.f
' They who have regarded adulteries as detestably
^ wicked, and lived in the chaste love of marriage, are above
' all others in the order and form of Heaven after death.
* Their beauty is surpassing, and the vigour of their youth
' endures for ever. The delights of their love are unspeak-
^ able, and they increase to eternity ; for all the delights
' and joys of Heaven are collected into wedded love, since
' Marriage corresponds to the conjunction of the Lord and
* Noil. 367 and 369. f No. 882.
438 AKOEUC RAIMENT.
^ the Church. No language can describe the external
* delights of those Angels.**
The Garments of Ae Aftgels.
The Angels of the Inmost Heaven go naked, for they
are pecoliarlv in innocence^ bat in the other Heavens the
Angels appear clothed, and each Angel in vesture corre-
sponding to his intelligence.
^The most intelligent have garments which ^tter as
* with flame^ and some are resplendent as with light. The
^ less intelligent have garments of clear or opaque white
'without splendour. The still less intelligent have gar-
* ments of various colours.
* The garments of the Angels do not merely appear to
* be garments, but they really are garments ; for they not
' CHily see but feel thenu and have many changes^ which they
' take off and put on« laving aside those which are not in
* use. and resuming them when they come into use again.
* That they are clothed with a variety of garments, I have
' witnessed a thousand times : and when I inquired whence
* thev obtainc^l thenu thev udd me^ ** firom the Lord/' and
* that thev receive them as cift^ •»<! that thev are some-
* times cKnhed witlH>ut knowing how. They also said that
* their ganiients are changed according to the changes of
* their states of Mind/t
* ITxe l\NXix>r ^Nf the Ang^s in the Spiritual World is so
* |?reau tlwt if I t^rr^ to adduce all the examples of it which
* I ha>v t^v>u thev WHM^M exceed belief. If anything there
• \a #s^ \V WMtWI IjMS? in tW llMTftts much more, equally
v^N-^^^iirirA. w»i^ W w^^>< ^^t ** :^^w4r«K^»y in I7«!^ puWished a special
l^x^n^ y^ hV^I^ U>A ^*^^«^ i* ^h» <H.Mir»» w« shaU nsview, no Inore
WHAT ANGELS CAN DO. 439
makes resigtanco, and ought to be removed because con-
trary to Divine Order, they cast it down and overturn it
by a mere effort of will and by a look.
* I have seen mountains, which were occupied by the
Wicked, thus cast down and overthrown, and sometimes
made to shake from one end to another, as by an earth-
quake. I have beheld rocks cleft in sunder, down to the
deep, and the Wicked who were upon them swallowed up.
I have also seen some hundreds of thousands of Evil
Spirits dispersed and cast into Hell ; for numbers are of
no avail against the Angels, nor arts, nor cunning, nor
confederacies: they sec through all and dispel them in a
moment.
' In the Natural World, when permitted. Angels may
exercise similar Power as is plain from the Word, in
which we read, that they utterly destroyed armies, and
caused a pestilence of which seventy thousand men died.
(>f the Angel who caused the pestilence it is written, " The
^^ Angel stretched out his hand against Jerusalem to destroy
" it ; but Jehovah repented Him of the evil, and said to the
" Angel, who destroyed the people. It is enough, stay now
^' thy hand. And David saw the Angel, who smote the
" people.'' ' ♦
It is however to be clearly understood, that tlie Angels
have no Power of themselves. They are simply instruments
in the hand of the Lord. They are Powers only so far as
they acknowledge their dependence upon Him. If any
Angel is so silly as to think that he has Power of himself,
he instantly becomes so weak, that he cannot resist a single
Evil Spirit.
The Power of the Angels is derived from their reception
of the Divine Truth, and their Power is equal to the measure
of its reception ; moreover, their reception of Divine Truth
* No. 229} and 2 Samud zxiv. 15, 16, 17.
440
ANQELIC PR0WE8B.
is strictly limited by the measure in which they receive the
Divine Love ; for Truths have all thdr Power from Love,
and none without Love : on the other hand, Love has all its
Power by Truths, and none without Truths ; Power results
from their conjunction. So far, therefore, as an AngePa
"Will is inhabited by the Divine Love, and his Understanding
by the Divine Truth, he is a Power, and so far the Lord is
with him.
^The Angels are of various Powers. The strongest
Angels constitute the Arms of the Grand Heavenly Man.
They who are in that province are in Truths more than
others, and there is an influx of Love into their Truths
from the Universal Heaven. The Power of the whole
Man transfers itself into the Arms, and by them the whole
Body exercises its force. Hence it is that Arms and Hands
in the Word denote Power.
^ Li Heaven there sometimes appears stretched forth a
naked Arm of such stupendous Power as to be able to break
in pieces everything it meets with, even if it were a rock
on Earth. Once it was moved towards me, and I had a
perception that it was able to crush my bones to powder.
* The immense Power the Angels have by Truths is
manifest from the circumstance that an Evil Spirit, when
only looked at by an Angel, falls into a swoon, and loses the
appearance of a Man, until the Angel turns away his eyes.
This effect is produced by the look of the Angels, because
their sight is from the Light of Heaven, which is from
Divine Truth. Their Eyes also correspond to Truths
derived from Love.'*
The Wisdom of the Angels.
The Wisdom of the Angels so far transcends the Wisdom
of Men as to be incommunicable by human language. Tlie
« No8. 231 and 232.
L
WISDOM OF THE ANQELS. 441
Angels, in fact, may be called Wisdoms. Their thoughts are
not bounded by notions derived from Time and Space, nor
are they drawn downwards by cares for the necessaries of
life ; ' for all they require is given them freely by the Lord,
^ they are clad gratis, they are fed gratis, they are housed
* gfratis.'*
' The chief reason why Angels are capable of such Wisdom
^ is, because they are free from the dominion of Self-Love ;
^ for, just in the degree that any one is free from Self-Love, is
^ it possible for him to grow wise in Divine Truth. Those in
' whom Self-Love predominates are in thick darkness as to
^ heavenly things, how acute soever they may be esteemed in
* worldly affairs.^ f
Angelic Wisdom is, m comparison with Human Wisdom,
as a myriad is to one. To illustrate the case by an example —
' An Angel from his Wisdom described Eegeneration,
and presented a hundred arcana concerning it in their
order, filling every arcanum with ideas which contained
arcana still more interior. His description embraced the
whole subject from beginning to end ; he explained in what
manner the Spiritual Man is conceived anew, is carried, as
it were, in the womb, is born, grows up, and is successively
perfected ; and he said he could increase the arcana to
several thousands, that what he had said related only to the
Regeneration of the External Man, and that there were
innumerable other things relating to the Regeneration of
the Internal Man.
' From this and similar examples, which I have heard
from Angels, it was made evident to me how great is their
Wisdom, and how profound, in comparison, is the Igno-
rance of Man ; for he scarcely knows what Regeneration
is, and is not acquainted with a single step of its progres-
sion in himself.' J
* No. 266. t No. 272. | No. 269.
442 WISDOM IS ROOTED IN OOODNESS.
The Wisdom of the Angels, in common with all else
pertaining to them, varies in character and degree in every
individual. There are wise Angels and there are Simple
Angels. The Wisdom of the Inmost Heaven far exceeds
that of the Middle Heaven, and the Wisdom of the Middle
Heaven far exceeds that of the Outmost Heaven.*
* The Angels are perfected in Wisdom continually, but
* they cannot to Eternity exhaust the Divine Wisdom. The
^ Lord is infinite ; the Angels are finite ; and there is no
* proportion between the Infinite and the Finite.
* All in Heaven desire Wisdom and relish it as a hungry
* man relishes food. Knowledge, Intelligence, Wisdom are
* spiritual nourishment, as food is physical nourishment ;
* they mutually correspond to each other.' f
The life of Angelic Wisdom is Goodness. The depen-
dence of the Understanding on the Will is a fact never lost
sight of by Swedenborg. The Will is a king who holds the
Keason and the Memory in service, and whatsoever makes
its appearance in the Reason or the Memory out of harmony
with the affections of the Will, is, sooner or later, slain and
extirpated.
Hence in the Future Life a Good Heart (which stands
for a Will inhabited by the Divine Love) soon rejects false
doctrine from the Understanding, and receives Truth in
correspondence with its Goodness ; on the other hand, an
Evil Heart rejects from its subordinate Understanding all
Truth at variance with its lusts. What is thus done speedily
and thoroughly beyond the grave is only the consummation
of a process begun on Earth — a process which we may
detect in our own Minds, in Sects, in Nations. Goodness
loves Truth, seeks it, and cherishes it; Evil loves False-
hood, seeks it, and burrows in it. Goodness and Truths,
Evil and Lies have invincible affinities.
No. 867. t Nos. 278 and 274.
WHAT WISDOM IS. 443
Wisdom is in Truth and in Truth only ; and as Truth
can alone find a home in the Understanding which is allied
to a Good Heart, the Good Man is the only Wise Man — ^the
only Man who has with Truth a real and vital connection.
From this it is not to be inferred, that the culture which
science, literature and business confer on the Mind passes
for nothing in the Spiritual World ; far otherwise. * The
^ Human Mind is Wee a field which acquires a quality accord-
^ ing to its cultivation.''* The difference to Eternity remains
wide between the Good Man, who has diligently cultivated
his Understanding, and the Good Man who has jogged
faithfully through his earthly duties without any hard intel-
lectual endeavour. What a Man is on Earth, he is in
Heaven: his original faculties are there only purified,
polished and expanded. The simple Good Man is in Heaven
the simple Angel, and the intelligent Good Man is the Wise
Angel — the leader and the helper of the less wise.
* All are received into Heaven, who have loved Goodness
* and Truth for their own sake : they who have loved much
* are called Wise, and they who have loved little are called
* Simple. The Wise in Heaven are in great light, but the
' Simple are in less light ; and everyone in light according
* to the degree of his affection for Goodness and Truth.' f
The storing up of Knowledge in the Memory is not to
be mistaken for that culture of the Understanding which
abides for ever ; but the ability to discern the why and the
wherefore, the causes and connections of things, and espe-
cially of the dependence of Creation in every item, at every
instant, upon God, the Great First Cause.
' I have conversed with many of the Learned, who en-
* joyed the highest literary celebrity on Earth, but who in
' heart denied the Divine Being, how much soever they con-
' fessed Him with their lips. They were become so stupid,
* No. 356. t No8. 349 and 350.
444 FATE OF ATHEI8TB.
that they could scarcely comprehend any cItiI, much less,
any spiritual truth. I perceived and saw also, that the
interiors of their Minds were so dosed, as to have become
black — (Mental States sre represented visibly in the
Spiritual World) — and thus they could not endure any
heavenly light. The blackness was deeper and more ex-
tensive in those who had confirmed themselves against the
Divine by their learned scientifics. Such men in the other
life receive false principles with delight, and absorb them
as a spunge does water, and they repel every truth, as a
bony elastic surface repels what falls upon it.
^ I have also been told, that the interiors of those who
have confirmed themselves against the Divine and in favour
of Nature, are ossified : their heads also appear callous, as
though they were made of ebony, and this appearance
reaches to the nose, — a sign that they have no longer any
perception.
^ Spirits of this character are immersed in whirlpools,
which appear like bogs, where they are terrified by the
phantasies into which their falses are turned. The infernal
fire which torments them is their lust of glory and a name,
by which they are excited to speak bitterly one against
another, and to torment with fiendish ardour those who do
not worship them as deities. They torture each other in
this manner by turns. Such is the change which all
worldly learning undergoes, which has not been illustrated
by Divine Light.'*
The Memory and its contents are to the Mind what the
Stomach and its contents are to the Body. Facts in the
Memory are not Intelligence. Until learning is digested
and assimilated, and put to use by the Understanding, it is
no more a part of the Mind than food in the Stomach is
blood and bone and tissue : learning like food must be in-
• No. 854.
KNOWLEDGE WHICH PEBI8HE8. 445
corporated with his structure ere it can be described as
the Man's. Perfect indeed are these analogies between
Mind and Body !
Men therefore who have crammed their memories with
languages and erudite gossip, whatever their reputation on
Earth, find themselves of small account in the Spiritual
World. Their acquirements, having no hold on their life,
are left behind with their other possessions, and the fools
they inif ardly were here, they manifestly appear there.
Dependent as the Memory is op the Understanding, the
Understanding is on the Will. In a holy Will alone is the
perennial root of Wisdom. It is possible to seek Truth, not
for its own sake, nor for its use to others, but for private
aggrandizement. In such a courtship, our only interest in
Truth is selfish. Did not the Truth promise to contribute
to our glory, we should be indifferent to it ; did it thwart
us, we should hate it. We can only be really wise by
Truth, and Truth can only be held as a permanent posses-
sion by the attraction of Divine Love in our Wills. K our
Hearts are nothing but Self-Love, we may, impelled by its
fierce heat, lay up stocks of learning, turn every scrap into
display, and argue and rhapsodize to the world's applause ;
but there ends our reward. We have loved ourselves—
never the Truth ; and when the masks and vain shows of
this world have for us passed away, we shall appear in the
Land of Spirits insane with self-conceit, and banished far
from the Angels, who love Goodness and Truth for their
own sake, and who could say to God in their pilgrimage
below, " Though Thou slay me yet will I trust in Thee."
Worship in Heaven.
Divine worship in the Heavens appears to be celebrated
in much the same manner as among English Dissenters,
where preaching is made the main business.
^ In order that I might understand the nature of the
446 A HEATENLT TABERNACLE.
^ assemblies in the churches of Heaven, it has been granted
^ me to enter them sometimes, and to hear the preaching.
^ The Preacher stands in a pulpit in the East : before his
^ face sit those who are in the light of wisdom above others,
^ and on their right and left, those who are in less light.
^ Thej sit in the form of a circus, so that all are in view of
^ the Preacher, and no one sits on either side of him, so as
^ to be out of his sight. Novitiates stand at the door, on
^ the east of the temple, and on the left of the pulpit. No
^ one is allowed to stand behind the pulpit, because the
* Preacher would be conftised by it ;♦ and he is conftised if
^ any one in the congregation dissents from what is said, so
^ that the dissentient is bound to turn away his head/ f
In another place Swedenborg describes a chapel in
Heaven which he visited with ten strangers from the World
of Spirits under the guidance of an Angel —
^ In the morning the strangers heard a proclamation.
To-day is the Sabbath. They arose and asked the Angel
what it meant. He replied, " It is for the Worship of
^^ Grod, which returns at stated times, and is proclaimed
" by the Preachers. The Worship is performed in our
'^ temples and lasts about two hours ; wherefore, if it
" please you, come along with me, and I will introduce
" you." So the strangers made themselves ready, and
followed the Angel to the temple. It was a large build-
ing, capable of containing an audience of 3,000, of a semi-
circular form, with benches carried round in continuous
sweep, the hinder ones being more elevated than those in
front. The pulpit in front of the seats was drawn a little
from the centre ; the door was behind the pulpit on the
* * In Heavon it is not lawful for any one to stand behind another, and to
' look at the back of his head ; because the influx of Goodness and Truth
' firom the Lord would be disturbed thereby.' No. 144.
SERMONS IN HEAVEN. 447
^ left hand. The ten strangers entered with the Angel, who
' pointed out to them the places where they were to sit ;
' telling them, " Everyone that enters the temple knows
*' ^^ his own place by a kind of instinct ; nor can he sit in
' ^^ any place but his own : in case he takes another place,
^ ^^ he neither hears nor perceives anything, and he also
^ ^^ disturbs the order ; the consequence of which is, that the
' " Preacher is not inspired." '♦
The sermons preached in the Heavens are fraught with
such wisdom, that nothing on Earth can be compared to
them : all of them arc practical, all bear on life, and none of
them on faith apart from life.
' Eeal Divine Worship in the Heavens does not however
^ consist in frequenting chapels and hearing sermons, but in
' a life of love, charity, and faith, according to doctrine ;
' and sermons in churches serve only as means of instruction
' in the conduct of life. I have conversed with Angels on
' this subject, and have told them that it is believed on
' Earth, that Divine Worship consists merely in going to
* church, hearing sermons, receiving the Holy Supper three
* or four times a year, and in the practice of other rites
' prescribed by the Church ; to which may be added, the
' setting apart of times for prayer, and a decent manner
^ whilst engaged in it. The Angels replied, that these
' external forms ought to be observed, but that they are of
^ no avail unless they flow from a desire to live aright.' f
The churches of the Spiritual Kingdom are built of
stone, and are more or less magnificent. The temples of
the Celestial Kingdom are constructed of wood, and are
humbler edifices : nor are they called churches, but houses
of God. The cause of this difference in ecclesiastical archi-
tecture lies, of course, in the character of the Kingdoms.
Wood corresponds to the Goodness of the Celestial Angels,
• • De Amore CanjugiaU,' No. 2S. f No. 222.
448 AXOEUC inoovcB.
and Stone to the Trath of the Spnitul Angds ; andTratfc
though rabordinate to Lore, u by £ur the showier qulity.
Preaching is not practised indiscriminatdy by the
Angels. Erery Ang^l has his peculiar ose, for whidi he ia
fitted by some predominant excdlenoe of &calty : to thia
use he is set i^art by the Lord, and in its exerdse finds hia
happiness and peace. In accordance with this infinitdy wiae
rule, which fills every office with genins, Preadiera are
ordained; and none unless so appointed by the manifeat
finger of God, are allowed to minister in the temples of
Heaven.*
The Innocence of the AngeU.
^ The natore and quality of Innocence are known to few
^ on Earthy and entirely unknown to those who are in BviL
^ Innocence indeed appears, before Men^s eyes, in the faoe|
^ speech, and gestures of little Children ; but still its nature
^ is unknown ; and it is still less known, that Eeaten abidee
^ with Men pre-eminently in Innocence.^ '\
The Innocence of little Children is not genuine Inno-
cence ; it is an external form without any corresponding
reality in them ; yet as a picture, it may furnish some idea
of true Innocence.
The charm of young Children arises from their having
no internal thought ; ^ they do not yet know what is good
^ and evil, nor what is true and false ; and these principles are
* the origin of thought.''\ Hence they have no prudence, no
deliberate purposes, no evil ends ; they are satisfied with
trifles, they love and trust their parents implicitly, and have
no anxiety about food and raiment, and futurity.
Now in so far as children are thus thoughtlessly innocent,
the Angels arc thoughtfully innocent. Let us enumerate
some of their characteristics —
» No. M6. t No. 276. t No. 277.
ANQELIG INNOCENCE. 449
^ They attribnte nothing good to themselves, but consider
themselves only as receivers, and ascribe all to the Lord.
' They are willing to be led by the Lord and not by
themselves.
* They love everything which is good, and are delighted
with everything which is true, because they know and per-
ceive, that to love what is good, and therefore to will and
do it, 18 to love the Lord ; and to love what is true, is to
love their Neighbour.
* They live contented with what they have, whether it bo
little or much, because they know, that they receive as
much as is good for them ; little, if little is best, and much,
if much is best ; and that they do not know themselves
what is best for them, because that is known only to the
Lord, whose Providence contemplates eternal ends in all
things. Hence they are not anxious about the future. In
dealing with their associates, they never act from an evil
end, but from what is good, just and sincere. They call
it cunning to act from an evil end ; and they shun cunning
as the poison of a serpent, because altogether contrary to
Innocence.
* Desiring nothing more than to be led by the Lord and
to refer all things to Him as His gifts, they are delivered
from Self-Love, and just in proportion as Self-Love is
subdued the Lord enters and abides with the Angel.'*
The essence of Innocence is therefore confidence in
the Lord. The Angels know that in themselves they are
nothingness and helplessness, and that in their Lord's
presence (as Love in their Wills and Truth in their Under-
standings) IS their whole safety and strength and joy, and
that just as they yield themselves to Him are they invested
with His omnipotence. In this absence of self-trust, self-
dependence and self-satisfaction consists that true Innocence
• No8. 277 and 278.
2 o
460 INKOCEaiGE 18 WISDOM.
of which the ignorant Innoeence of CShildhood is the fiunt
and evanescent semblance.
Hence Innocence is one with Wisdom, yea it is the acme
of Wisdom, the confession, the practice, the enjoyment of
the highest Truth ! Innocence is the measure of Hearen,
and an Angel's place in Heaven is according to the measure
of his Innocence. The Inmost Heaven is therefore the
peculiar home of Innocence.
^ The Celestial Angels above all the rest love to be led
^ by the Lord as little children by their father. They are
^ nearest to the Lord, and live as it were in the Lord. They
^ appear simple outwardly, and before the Angels of the
^ Inferior Heavens, as little Children, and naked. They also
^ appear like those who are not very wise, although th^ are
^ the wisest of the Heavens ; for they know, that they have
^ no Wisdom of their own, and that to be truly wise ia to
^ admit the fact, and to confess, that the things they know
^ are as nothing compared to those they do not know.'*
To the Crafty, to the Politic, to those who think life
impossible without the exercise of cunning and occasional
deceit, this Innocence must seem incredible, impracticable,
unattainable. Nevertheless there is no Innocence in Heaven
which was not once Innocence on Earth ; some must have
found it practicable below, for there is no virtue there which
was not first virtue here. Nor has the criticism of Craft and
Policy in the matter of Innocence any force : Experience
alone has the right of speech : and who are they, who
having committed themselves unreservedly to the Divine
Will have failed to find their help and defence and all
sufficient recompence in the strong right hand of God?
We have all made trial of prudence, we have all followed
the lights of Self-Will, as many wounds and bruises prove,
but who is there to testify on the side of Innocence ?
• No. 280.
PEACE AND JOT OF HEAVEN. 451
The Race of the Angels.
As is the Innocence of the Angels so is their Peace :
Innocence and Peace go hand in hand, for Peace is the
result, the delight of Innocence. ' They who have not felt
* it, can have no conception of the Peace which the Angels
^ enjoy. Peace exists in Men, who are wise and good, and
^ thence conscious of content in God ; but so long as they
* live on Earth, Peace lies stored up in their interiors, and
* is not revealed until their interiors are opened when they
' leave the body and enter Heaven.
* When an Angel of the Inmost Heaven draws near, the
^ influence from his Innocence is so sweet, that the spirit is
* thrilled through with an extasy to which all earthly
* delights are as nothing. This I speak from experience.' •
The Uajypiness of the Angch,
Ere we speak of the happiness of the Angels we may
ask and answer a question —
Who is happiest ?
He who loves most.
There is no happiness apart from Love ; and the intenser
the Love the intenser the happiness. From the affection of
lovers, of husband and wife, of parent and child, of friend
and friend, are derived the tenderest, deepest, most exquisite
joys of which humanity is susceptible. If not in loving,
Where shall we seek happiness ?
As Angels are no more than glorified Men and Women,
the source of their happiness remains the same. They are
happy because they love, and happy in the precise measure
of their Love.
Now Love is of two kinds — one diffusive, the other
* No8. 282, 284, and 288. 8eo alflo No. 401 as to the devclopcment of
hiildcn goodness on EUtfth into ineffablo joys in Heaven.
2 a 2
452 THE LOVES OF HEAVEN.
absorbent. The first, Swedenborg describes as Love to the
Lord and the Neighbour ; the second, as Love of Self and
the World.
^ The Loves of Heaven are Love to the Lord and Love
to the Neighbour, and it is the nature of those Loves to
communicate delight. Love to the Lord is communicative^
because the Lord's Love is the Love of communiccUinff all
thcU He Jm8 to H%8 Creatures; and the same Love is in each
of those who love Him, beoauee the Lord is in them. Love
to the Neighbour is of a similar quality. The whole
business of those Loves is, to diffuse joy.
* It is otherwise with the Loves of Self and the World.
The Love of Self absorbs delight : the Love of the World
bums with the desire of universal possession. It is the
nature of these Loves to destroy joy in others. When
even they appear communicative it is for the sake of Self
— that they may receive their own with usury.'*
In the character of these Loves we may perceive the great
gulf which divides Heaven and Hell. In Devils, there is no
Love of the Lord or the Neighbour; their whole being is
included in the Love of Self and of Property. In Angels
the Love of Self and of Property exists, but entirely subor-
dinate to the Love of the Lord and the Neighbour. Hence
the ruling and constant motive of every Angel is to be useful,
to be kind, to be a blessing to all around him. For Self and
Property he cares, but only cares because Self and Property
are instruments of well-doing : he cares for them as does an
artizan for the tools whereon his efficiency depends. 'Angelic
* Love is to love the Neighbour more than Self.'f
Try then and conceive what must be the happiness of
Heaven where the ardour of every Angel is spent in doing
g^odl
^ How great is the delight of Heaven may appear from
■^ —
• No. 899. t No. 406.
QIVINa IS GETTINa. 453
' this fact alone, that it is the joy of the Angels to communi-
^ cate delight and blessing to one another ; and since all in
^ Heairen are moved with this passion^ it is plain how immense
^ is its delight.
^ Heaven is so full of delights, that viewed in itself it is
^ nothing but delight and blessedness ; so that whether we
^ saj Heaven or Happiness it is the same thing/*
To a selfish and worldly Man the happiness of Heaven is
inexplicable. His pleasures are in power, reputation, riches
and voluptuousness ; and when he hears that the joy of an
Angel consists in none of those things, he shudders at the
thought of such indifiercnce ; for he feels, that to deprive him
of these pleasures would be to rob him of every reason for
existence —
^ He would be exceedingly astonished if he were told, that
* when all the pleasures of honour, gain and the flesh are re-
* moved, there remains for the Angel delights innumerable
^ and incomparable with those to which he is familiar.
* I have conversed with Spirits who supposed that Heaven
* and heavenly joy consist in becoming great ; but they were
^ told, that in Heaven he is greatest who is least. He is called
^ least who knows he has no power and wisdom of his own,
* nor desires to have any except from the Lord. He who is
^ least, according to this description, has the greatest happi-
^ ness, and since he has the greatest happiness, he is the
^ greatest, for he has all power from the Lord, and excels all
* others in wisdom.
* What is it to be greatest, unless to be most happy ? for
* to be most happy is what the powerful seek by power, and
* the rich by riches.
* The Spirits were further told, that Heaven does not con-
* sist in desiring to be least with a view to be the greatest, —
^ but in Angels sincerely desiring the good of others more
• Noik 397 and 399.
451 EXFEBIENCE OP ANOEUO JOT.
than their own, and in Berving them for the aake of iheli*
happiness from pore loYe, without any selfish hope of
reward.
^ In order that I might know the nature of heayenly jojj
it has been granted me by the Lord, frequently and for long
times, to feel it distinctly, but obscurely, because the per-*
ception was of the most general order.
^ I felt that the joy and delight came as from the heart
and diffused itself with the greatest softness through all the
inmost fibres, and thence into the collections of fibres, with
such an inmost sense of gratification, that every fibre seemed
to be nothing but joy and delight, and all my perceptiYe
and sensitive powers alive with happiness. The joy of
bodily pleasures, compared with these joys, is like a gross
and pungent dot of matter to a pure and most gentle
aura.
^ I perceived frirther, that when I wished to transfisr all
my delight to another, a pew delight flowed in, more inte-
rior and full than the former, and that its volume was pro-
portionate to the intensity of my desire of communication.
This was perceived to be from the Lord.
* When Good Spirits, not yet qualified for Heaven, per-
ceive this blessedness in the sphere of an Angelas love, they
are so enraptured with delight, that they fall as it were into
a delicious swoon. This often happens to Spirits who desire
to know the nature of heavenly joy.'*
The Speech of the Angels.
The Language of Heaven is a universal Language. It
is not taught ; every one at death finds he has it, and speaks
it instinctively. Its sounds are sounds of affection articulated
into words by the understanding.
As Language in the Spiritual World is the outflow of
* Nos. 398, 408, 409 and 413.
ANQEUC LANQUAQE. 455
affection throngh intellect into words, Speech supplies a tore
index to character —
^ The wiser Angels can discover the whole life of a speaker
^ from the tone of his voice combined with a few of his ex-
^ pressions. In the tone they discern his ruling love. This
^ I have often seen done.*
^ The Speech of the Celestial Angels is like a gentle
' stream, soft and continuous ; that of the Spiritual Angels
^ rather vibratory and broken. Celestial Language partakes
^ greatly of the sound of the vowels U and O : it contains no
< hard consonants, and few transitions from one consonant to
' another without the interposition of a word which 'begins
* with a vowel ; therefore in the Word the particle and so
^ often occurs, as those may see, who read the Word in
^ Hebrew. Spiritual Language is distinguished by the ft*ee
^ use of the vowels A and I. In vowels, the affections
'move.'t
Wonderful is the expressiveness of Angelic Speech —
^ Angels can express in a minute what Man cannot utter
^ in half an hour, in a single word more than he can in a
* thousand, and in a few words what would occupy pages of
* writing, as has been proved to me by much experience.
' There are things innumerable in one Angelic expression,
^ which could not be set forth by all the words of Human
* Language ; for in every single word spoken by Angels there
' are contained arcana of wisdom in continuous connection,
* which Human Science cannot reach. Angels can recite in a
* few words, the whole contents of any book. They supply
* by their tones what their words do not fully express.
^ I have occasionally been let into the state in which
^ Angels are, and at such times have conversed with them and
' understood everything they said ; but when I returned to
^ my former state and wished to recollect what I had heard, I
* No0. 836 and 269. f No. 841.
456 ANQEL8 SPEAKIKa.
* was not able. There were a thousand things whicb ooold
< not be compressed into ideas of natural thought, and which
^ therefore were ineffable in any degree by huinan words.^*
Angelic Speech as it corresponds to Angelic Affectioin is
musical, and its eloquence not only pleases the ear, bat its
tenderness touches the heart—*
^ An Angel once spoke to a certain hard-hearted SjMiit,
^ and he was at length so affected by his discourse, that he
^ burst into tears, saying, that he could not resist it, becanae-
^ it was love speaking, and that he had never wept before.'t
Infernal Language in like manner is an efflux from in.
femal character —
* It is held in the utmost aversion, by the Angels. They
cannot endure the discourse of Devils, which affects them aa
a foul odour does the nostrils.'l
^ Angelic Language has nothing in common with Human
Language, except so far as the sounds of words correspond
to the affections for which they stand. Angels cannot utter
a single word of Human Language. They have tried, but
were not able; for it is quite impossible for an Angel to
form any sound out of harmony with his private affection.
' I have been told that the primitive Language of Man-
kind was in agreement with Angelic Language because they
had it from Heaven, and that the Hebrew tongue agrees
with it in some particulars/ §
The Speech of the Angeh with Man.
When an Angel speaks with a Man he does not make use
of his own, but the Man^s language ; thus in French with a
Frenchman, in Greek with a Greek, in Swedish with a Swede.
This at first sight may seem odd. As the power to converse
in Angelic or Infernal Language is innate in every one of us,
» Nos. 239, 240 and 269. t Nos. 238 and 242.
% No. 245. § No. 237.
ANGELS* TALK WITH MEN. 457
we should have inferred that sach language was the appro-
priate medium of intercourse ; and the more especially, as we
have just learned, that ^ Angels cannot utter a word of Human
^ Language.' Not so, says Swedenborg, and adduces his
experience.
An Angel in talking to a Man uses the Man's memory-^
^ He enters into the Man's memory so perfectly that he is
^ almost induced to believe, that he knows all the Man knows,
^ even all the languages he has learned.
^ I have talked with Angels on the subject, and have said,
^ that possibly they might fancy they conversed with me In
^ my mother tongue, for so it appeared to them ; but that they
* did not.'
Here comes the explanation —
^ The Angels replied, that they were not deceived by the
^ appearance^ but were aware of the true state of the case.
^ When they conversed with Man they conjoined themselves
^with his spiritual thought, which flows into his natural
^ thought, which coheres with his memory. Hence Man's
^ language appears as their own, and likewise all his know-
ledge.'*
Thus, if we understand aright. Angels' thoughts are trans-
mitted through a number of media in the Man^a Mind to a
final investiture in the words of his familiar tongue. If in
his memory there should be no words fitted to receive Angels'
thoughts, then, we presume, as incommunicable, they woidd
be dissipated.
If Angels comprehended that their ownership in Man's
memory during intercourse with him, was only apparent and
temporary, there were Spirits, who would not listen to such a
doctrine —
^ I discussed the same question with Spirits. They were
* not willing to believe, that they merely spoke /rom Man, but
• No. 246.
4S8 spiBin gPEAK nr max.
' Mserted, that they fpoke m Manf and held firmly that hb
^memory was really theirs, and that he knew nothing. I
^ endeaToored by many argoments to convince them that they
^ were mistaken, bat in vain.'*
The conversation between an Angel and a Man is not
tacit —
^ The speech of an Angel or a Spirit with a Man b heard
^ as sonorously as the speech of one Man with another ; never-
^ theloss it is not heard by other Men who are present, but
^ only by the Man who is addressed. The speech of an Angel
^ or a Spirit first flows into a Man's thonght, and then by an
^ internal way into his ear ; thus it affects him from within :
^ whereas the speech of Man with Man flows first into the
^ air and then into the car, and thus affects him from without.
^ Hence it is evident that the speech of an Angel or a Spirit
^ with a Man is heard in the Man^ but by him, as sonorously
^ as if without.'t
The communications of Angels and Spirits are limited by
the material found in Man's memory —
^ It is not allowed that any Angel or Spirit shoidd speak
^ with Man from his own memory, but only from the Man's.
^ If a Spirit wore to speak with a man from his own memory,
^ the Man would appropriate the Spirit's memory as his own,
^ and his Mind would become confused with the recollection
^ of things which he had never heard or seen. That this is
^ the case has been given me to know by much experience.
^ In conHcquonce of the memories of Spirits getting muddled
^ witli Men's, some of the Ancients conceived the idea, that
^ tliey had existed in another realm previous to their birth on
• No. S4S. In the trMilte on '(htyuffial Love,* No. 826, wiU be found a
onrlottt diMUMlon between Bwedenborg end the Angele on this subject, with
preotloel illaetnittone. Bee alio hie private experiences from the * Spiritual
* Dhqf,* piHiee S98 and 804 of the present volume.
t Ka84a.
ANQEL8 AND DXVIU WITH KEH. 4fi&
^ Earth. Thus they accounted for the poBiession of memo«
^ rics, which they knew, had not orig^ated in ordinary
* experience.'*
This law gives the reason for a continual complaint pre-
ferred against those who profess to hold communication with
the Spiritual World — that they receive nothing new. On
the conditions here stated it is manifestly out of the power of
Angels or Spirits or Devils to communicate anything new to
Men ; they are limited by their Medium's memory : the con-
tents thereof may be vivified and thrown into new forms by
the Agents who occupy it, but they can add no material of
their own. The law likewise sheds a flood of light on
Swedenborg's own case, for he was no exception to the rule.
He was indeed, as we have just read, ^ occasionally let into
' the state in which Angels are, and conversed in Angelic
^ Language, but on his return to his habitual condition, and
^ wished to recollect what he had heard, he was not able.'t
The Consociation o/Angeb and Devils toith Men.
Swedenborg with even more than his customary iteration
strives to impress on his readers the fact, that Angels and
Men and Devils are intimately connected —
^Man without communication with Heaven and Hell
^ would not be able to live for a moment. I£ communication
' were broken, he would fall down dead as a stock.
^ This has been proved to me by experience. The Spirits
' associated with me were a little removed, and instantly,
^ according to their removal, I began, as it were, to expire ;
^ and I should have expired, unless they had come back
' again.' I
The Universe, in Swedenborg^s eyes, is One ; nothing, he
asHcrts, can exist in isolation ; and the Human Mind is no
exception to the law : by Goodness it is related to the Angels,
• No. 256. t No. 239. I 'Arcana OoduHa,' No. ^849.
460 CONDITIONS OF BPIBTrUAL INTEROOUBSE.
and by Evil to the Deyils : in Hamlet's words, it is open, ever
open, to ^^ airs from Heaven and blasts from Hell.''
Man and Nature are the bases of Heaven and Hell ; with-
out them, their continuance would be impossible. The
Heavens find rest and embodiment in the good things of
Man and Nature, and the Hells in the evil things. This con-
nection of Men with Angels and Devils is as unconscious on
their side as on ours. When moved with gentle feelings we
do not enter into open personal acquaintance with Angels,
nor when stirred by vile passions, with Devils, although Angels
or Devils live in us at such moments.
^ Spirits, and still less Angels, are not able to see anything
^ on Earth ; for the light of our Sun is to them thick dark-
^ ness ; nor can Man see anything in the Spiritual World, for
^ the light of Heaven is to him thick darkness.
' Angels and Spirits know as little of Man as he does of
^ them, because their state is Spiritual and his Natural, and
* tlio two states are connected solely by correspondences.'*
Swcdenborg allowed Spirits to use his eyes as windows to
look out on Earth and they were charmed with the novel sen-
sation; whilst his own appearance in the Spiritual World
surprised the Angels quite as much as his claim to be their
visitor astonished Mankind. He relates this anecdote of the
wonder his appearance and disappearance excited in the
breast of an Angel who was a Schoolmaster —
' I arose from the Body in the Spirit, and approached
^ him. On seeing me he said —
* " Who arc you ? I was surprised as I saw you coming
^ ^' this way, for at one instant you came into my sight, and
* " at the next went out of it ; or that at one time I saw you,
' ^^ and suddenly I did not see you : assuredly you are not in
^ ^^ the same order of life that we are."
• Noi. 909 ftnd 682, * Arcana Calutla; No. 1,880; and 'ApooaitfptU
'AyttMte,* No. 1,846.
SURPRIBE WITH SWSDEKBOBa. 461
^ I replied smilini
^ ^' I am neither a player nor Vertnmnas, but I am at one
^ '^ time in your sight, and at another out of it ; thus both a
* " foreigner and a native."
^ Thereon he looked at me and said—
^ ^^ Yoa speak things strange and wonderful : tell me^ who
*" are you?"
^ ^^ I am in the World/^ I said, ^^ in which you have been,
^ ^' and from which you have departed, and which is called the
^ ^^ Natural World ; and I am also in the World to which you
^ ^^ have come, and in which you are, which is called the
^ '^ Spiritual World. Hence I am in a natural state, and at
^ ^^ the same time in a spiritual state ; in a natural state with
^ ^^ Men on Earth, and in a spiritual state with you : when I
^ '' am in the natural state you do not see me, but when I am
^ ^' in the spiritual state, you do : that such is my condition
^ ^' has been granted by the Lord. It is known to you, Illus-
^ ^' trious Sir, that a Man of the Natural World does not see
* " a Man of the Spiritual World, nor vice versd; wherefore
* " when I let my Spirit into my Body, you did not see me,
* " but when I let it out you did see me." '*
Angels and Men did not always abide in this unconscious
association. We have elsewhere read, that in the Adamie
Church they were accustomed to hold sweet converse to-
gether, but since those times of innocence. Heaven has been
shut and but rarely opened —
' Although many in succeeding ages have conversed with
^ Angels and Spirits, as Moses, Aaron and others, yet it has
^ been in a mode differing altogether from that which prevailed
' in primitive ages.'f
A reason for the cessation of open intercourse is given by
Swedenborg in the malignity of Evil Spirits —
* If they could perceive that they were associated with
• 'I)e Amore CanjughU,' No. 826. t 'Arcana OcdeiHa,' No. 784.
i6S DANGSBS 09 OFKN XXTEBCX>tJBni WITH BPnUTB.
' Man, they would attempt by a thousand meakia to destroy
^him; for they hate himwith a deadly hatred. Astheyknew
^ I was in the flesh, they were continually striying to make an
^ end of me, not as to the Body only, but especially as to the
^ Soul ; for to destroy any Man or Spirit is the very delight
' of all who are in Hell : but I have been all along protected
* by the Lord.
^ Because it is so dangerous, it is rarely allowed at this
^ day for Men to speak with Spirits ; and the greatest care is
^ ez«:isised by the Lord to prevent Spirits from knowing that
' they are attendant on Man.^*
It lies beyond my province, or it would be very easy
to illustrate Swedenborg's assertion of the danger of in**'
tercourse with Spirits from the terrible experiences of some
who have forced themselves into open acquaintance with their
unseen associates. Samuel Leavitt, speaking from the United
States of America, fairly expresses the case when he says —
^ Spiritualism has relieved many thousand souls from a
^ fearful looking-for of annihilation, but it has caused many
^ thousand other souls to wish, at times, that they had never
* been bom.'
Supposing our spiritual eyes were opened we should dis-
cover ourselves in the company of Spirits of the same
character as ourselves, with thoughts and feelings the dupli-
cates of our own, and ready to sanction every passion, and
• No8. 349 and 292 ; and 'Areana CMetHa,* No. 5,863.
' To conyerse with the Angels of Heaven is granted only to those who aro
' in truths derived from love, and especially to those who are in the acknow-
' lodgement of the Lord, and of the Divine in His Human.* No. 250.
' It is g^ven to no one to speak with Angels unless he be of an angelio
' quality, and thus fit to associate with them —unless his faith and love be
' directed to the Lord ; and when a Man by love and faith is conjoined to the
* Lord, he is secure from the assaults of Evil Spirits.
* Such faith and love being rare, is the reason why there are so few at this
' day to whom it is given to hold intercourse with Angels.' * Arcana Oodeatta^*
No. 9,438.
MAN AND THE BIBLS. 468
echo every prejadice we entertain* With such company we
shall blend eternally at death ; meanwhile it is better for as
to endure contradiction and correction by contraries firom oar
Neighbours on Earth.
As our characters change our company changes — ^ One
^ kind of Spirits is with us in infancy, another in childhood,
^ another in youth and manhood, and another in old age.' K
we are repneratmg we forsake Devils, and progress from
lower to higher Heavens ; if we are degenerating we forsake
Angels and sink into deeper and deeper Hells.*
The Conjunction of Heaven with Man by the Word*
It has been said, that Heaven is incarnated in love and
truth in Humanity as is a Soul in a Body ; or to put the fact
in other terms, ^ the Human Race without Heaven would be
^ like a chain which has lost a Unk, and Heaven without the
^ Human Race would be like a house without a foundation.' f
Now whatever excites good feelings and true thoughts in
us serves Heaven ; for by good feelings and true thoughts
we are conjoined with the Angels, and Heaven finds requisite
incarnation.
The Holy Scriptures are the grand means whereby the
Lord is made known to us, and our hearts inflamed with His
love and our minds illumined with His wisdom. By the
Word therefore the Church and Heaven are knit together —
but we had better not anticipate remarks which will be more
in place in a future chapter devoted to Swedenborg's doctrine
concerning the Scriptures.
^ The Word is kept by the Angels in the most sacred
' recesses of their temples ; and when a recess is opened it
^ shines like a great star, and sometimes like a sun, and in the
' radiance are seen rainbows.
^ That every truth of the Word shines with a bright light
* No. 295; 'Dt Fide AUunwiiam,* No. 4. f No. 304.
464 SCRIPTURAL FIREWORKS.
was made evident to me fixnn the drcumstanee, that when
any single verse is transcribed on a sorap of paper and
thrown up into the air, a bright light appears of the same
shape as the slip on which the text is written. In this way
the Angels produce brilliant figures of birds, fishes, etc
^ What is still more surprising, if any one rubs his fisuse,
hands and clothes on the open Word, he shines as though he
were standing in a star. This I have often seen and won-
dered at ; and thereby I understood why the face of Moses
shone when he brought down the tables of the covenant
from Mount Sinai.
* If however any Spirit, who is in falses, looks at the
Word, as it rests in its sacred repository, there rises a thick
darkness before his eyes, through which the Word is seen
as black, and sometimes as covered with soot ; if he touch it
there at once ensues a violent explosion whereby he is flung
into the comer of the room, and there lies as one dead for
about an hour. I£ he venture to try the experiment of
throwing texts into the air, they explode, and the paper is
torn in pieces and vanishes. The same happens, as I have
often seen, if the text be thrown into the comer of a
room.'*
Writing in Heaven,
Writing, like language, is in Heaven spontaneous : it is
not taught ; it flows from the hand of an Angel with perfect
ease ; nor does he over pause to discuss or select his expres-
sions. The Angels can likewise produce writings by the
mere exercise of thought ; but these are not permanent.f
The letters used by the Angels of the Spiritual Kingdom
are like the ordinary Roman type before the reader ; those
used by the Angels of the Celestial Kingdom are in some
Sooietiet like Arabic characters, and in others like old Hebrew
• *IIM4MMm0 M^' Nos. S09 and 941. f Nos. 2S0 and 262.
HEAVENLY LITERATURE. 465
letters, but inflected above and beneath, with marks around
and within them, every dot and dash being pregnant with
meaning.
*' By these letters the Angels express arcana of wisdom
more than can be got into words. I have been told that the
Most Ancient People wrote in the same way, and that the
style was transferred to the Hebrew, the letters of which
were anciently all inflected : not one of them had the square
form in use at this day: hence too, the very jots and
tittles of the Holy Scriptures involve divine and heavenly
arcana.
^ I have seen writings which consisted of nothing but
numbers; and was told, that they were from the Inmost
Heaven, and that they thus appeared as mere rows of figures
to the Inferior Angels; and likewise, that tliis numerical
writing set forth arcana, some of which neither thought nor
words could compass.'*
The Angels have books and libraries just as Men have ;
and their book of books is the Bible. From it they preach,
from it they draw doctrine, and in its pages find all wisdom.
In their version, however, they do not read of the places
and persons with which we are familiar, but of the spiritual
realities of which the Jews, Canaan and the Gentiles were
the symbols. In Heaven too, as on Earth, the Scriptures
yield diverse and appropriate nutriment to all manner of
sincere readers.
^ It is a wonderful circumstance that the Word in Heaven
^ is so written, that the Simple understand it in simplicity,
^ and the Wise in wisdom. The various curvatures and
^ marks over the letters, which exalt the sense, the Simple
* neither regard nor understand, whereas the Wise are
* attentive to them, and every one according to the height
* of his wisdom.'t
• Nos. 260 and 2Cd; and ' Vera ChrUHana Rdigio,' No. 241. f No. 241.
2h
466 CHILDREN BECOME ANQELS.
Infanta in Heaven,
All Infants go to Heaven — wheresoever bom, whether
within the Church or ont of it, whether of pious or of wicked
parents — and are educated into Angels.
Infants at death are received by female Angels, who while
on Earth loved children tenderly. They accept them as
their own ; the Infants love them as mothers ; and each
Angel has as many as satisfies her maternal desires. As
the children grow up, they are transferred to masters, whose
delight is in the education of the young.
The instruction of Infants is much easier in Heaven than
on Earth, where the action of the !Mind is fettered and
frustrated by the dullness of the flesh. They walk, and
speak and write with scarcely an effort, and being innocent
— ^having acquired no evil from actual life — they advance
without hindrance in love and in wisdom. Nevertheless
their freedom from sin is not freedom from evil —
* I have conversed with Angels concerning Infants in
* Heaven, and inquired whether they were pure from evils,
^ because they had done no evil like Adults. I was told that
* they are in evil, and are indeed nothing hut evil ; that they,
* in common with all Angels, are withheld from evil and held
^ in goodness by the Lord ; and that hence it appears as if
* they were good in themselves.'*
This statement is worth noting as a bold illustration of
a cardinal article in Swedenborgian theology.
Children are sedulously cautioned by their angelic in-
structors against taking any pride in the divine brightness
and fervour which glow in their lives. All their virtues are
the Lord^s, and are no more creditable to them than is the
light wherewith the Sun glorifies a room to be ascribed to
the room.
* No. 342.
A girls'* school. 467
* A Prince, who died in infancy and w&b brought up in
' Heaven, fancied that he was good of himself : in conse-
* quence thereof he was let into his hereditary evils, and
^ then I perceived from his sphere, tliat ho had a desire to
^ domineer over others, and to trifle with adulteries. As
^ soon as he perceived and confessed the real state of his
* case, he was restored to angelic life.'*
There is a curious account given by our Author in his
Diary of the manner in which Girls are educated in Heaven.
* They are kept three, four, or five together, and each
has her own chamber and her own bed ; and adjoining is a
closet for clothes and utensils. Perfumes are given them ;
also boxes and drawers in which they keep the nick-nacka
in which they delight.
* They are always kept employed over needle-work.
This often consists of embroidery of nosegays and such like
on white linen; which fancy-work they either use them-
selves or distribute as gifts, but never sell.
' They have dress for common use and finer dress for
holidays given them gratis, and without knowledge of how
or whence the garments come. When they see spots on
their dress, it is a sign that they have thought or done
something amiss; and the spots cannot be washed out.
They therefore search their hearts to discover the cause,
and when the fault is found and repented of, the spots
vanish. In like manner, when they discover that a gar-
ment has disappeared from their wardrobe, they imme-
diately know they have done something wrong, and
straitway ponder over their conduct. If the mistake can-
not be ascertained, some married woman tells them. If,
on the other hand, they find a new dress in their wardrobe,
they heartily rejoice, for it is a token of well-doing.
* They have likewise little gardens in which, as long as
♦ No. 342.
2 H 2
468 INFANTS IN HEAVEN.
they are maids, there are many sorts of flowers, but no
fruits until they become wives. \Mien they see the flowers
fade, or degenerate into inferior kinds, they search their
minds with sorrow for the cause; but if their beauty
increases and they take higher forms, then are they glad,
for His a proof, that their thoughts have been well
employed.
' They have pieces of gold and silver money given them^
which they treasure as evidences of diligence and virtue.
They have each a copy of the Word and a Psalter, which
they carry to Church, and also read in private ; if they
neglect to do so, or are angry, or artful, the Word
vanishes.
* At times they are visited and examined by Preachers.'*
It is diflicult to read this artless description of a heavenly
boarding-school without thinking of something like Miss
Pinkerton's academy for young ladies on Chiswick Mall in
' Vanity FaiW
The third part of Heaven consists of Infants,t and in
the Grand Heavenly Man they constitute the province of
the Eye. Some are of a celestial and some of a spiritual
genius, and are assorted accordingly in Societics.J
* The state of Men who grow up to maturity on Earth
* may be as perfect as the state of Infants brought up in
* Heaven, provided Self-Love and Love of the World arc
* subordinated to the Love of the Lord and the Neighbour.'§
Oeniiles in Heaven,
^ It is a common opinion, that they who are born out of
*• the Church, and are called Heathen or Gentiles, cannot be
* saved because they do not possess the Word, and thus are
* ignorant of the Lord, without whom there is no salvation ;
♦ 'Diarium SpirHualc,' Nos. 5,6G0-C7. f No. 4.
\ Nos. 333 and 339. § No. 345.
GENTILES BECOME ANGELA. 469
but it is certain, that they may be saved, because the mercy
of the Lord is universal, and extends to every individual ;
because they arc born Men as well as those who are within
the Church, — who are respectively few, — and because it is
no fault of theirs, that they are ignorant of the Lord.
^ That Gentiles are saved as well as Christians, may be
known to those who understand what makes Heaven with
Man ; for Heaven is in Man, and they who have Heaven
in themselves go to Heaven after death.
^ It is Heaven in 3i[an to acknowledge a Divine Being,
and to be led by Him in doing His will as far as it is
known.
* Naio it is well hnown^ that the Gentiles live a moral life as
well as Christians^ and many of them a better, A moral life
is led either for the sake of God, or for the applause of the
world. Moral life for the sake of God is also spiritual life ;
it is life from God, and saves a Man ; but moral life for
the sake of worldly applause is mere selfishness, and has
nothing of Heaven in it.
^ It is a divine truth, that without the Lord there is no
salvation ; but this is to be imderstood as implying, that
there is no salvation but from the Lord. There are many
£arths in the Universe full of inhabitants, yet in scarcely
any of them is it known, that the Lord assumed Humanity
on our Earth ; nevertheless as they adore the Divine Being
under a Human Form, they are accepted and led by the
Lord.'*
Gentiles are prepared for Heaven in the World of Spirits
by Angels, who have risen from their own ranks, and who
can therefore deal sympathetically with their difficulties.
The good quickly reject their idolatries and receive the
Christian faith. ^ When they hear that God was made Man,
^ and thus manifested Himself on Earth, they instantly
• NoH. 318, 319 and 321.
470 HEATHENS BEFORE CHRIffTIANS.
' acknowledge the truth and adore the Lord.'* The best of
the Gentiles come from Africa.
In reading these statements of rapid eonyersion from
Heathenism to Christianity, we must bear in mind the
affinity which, Swedenborg maintains, exists between a good
heart and the truth, so that the one has but to meet the
other, and the result is instant and intimate union. For
example —
* A certain Spirit from among the Gentiles, who had
^ lived on Earth in charity according to his religious belief,
^ heard some Christian Spirits reasoning about articles of
* faith, and wondered at their wrangling. He said he did
* not like to hear them, for they reasoned from appearances
* and fallacies, and reproved them by observing, " If I am
* " good, I can know, from goodness itself, what things are
*"true; and what truths I do not know, I am able to
* "receive." 'f
That he might appreciate the quality of the Gentiles,
Swedenborg was allowed to converse with them in the
Spiritual World, ^ sometimes for hours and sometimes for
^days together. ^1 How high was his opinion of their
character in comparison with Christians, and how positive
his hope that the Church was to be transferred to them, we
have seen in the ' Arcana CcelesttaJ* Of the precious material
for the structure of the New Jerusalem, which he fancied he
had discovered in Heathendom, he gives a specimen in the
following narrative —
* Once when I was reading the XVII. and XVIII. chap-
ters of Judges, concerning Micah, whose graven image,
Teraphim, and Levite were taken from him by the sons of
Dan, a Gentile Spirit was present, who when on Earth had
worshipped a graven image. He heard attentively what
was done to Micah, and of the grief he suffered for the loss
• Nos. 321 and 514. f Nos. 320 and 321. X No. 322.
OOODNEfiB EASILY BECEIYES TBUTH. 471
of his idol, and his sympathetic sorrow was so great that
it nearly deprived him of the power of thought. I perceived
his sorrow and his innocence of heart Some Christian
Spirits were present, and wondered how the worshipper of
a graven image should be moved with so great an affection
of mercy and innocence.
^ Afterwards some Good Spirits talked with him, and
observed that he might know, as a rational being, that a
graven image ought not to be worshipped ; but that he
ought to think of Qod, independently of idols, as the
Creator and Governor of the Universe, and that the Lord
is that God.
^ When this conversation was going on, the interior
affection of the Gentile^s worship was communicated to me,
and I perceived, that it was much more holy than Christians'.
From this circumstance it is evident, that the Gentiles of
the present day enter Heaven more easily than Christians.*
^ This Gentile Spirit was capable of imbibing all the
doctrines of faith, and of retaining them with the deepest
affection ; for he possessed the compassion which springs
from love, and his ignorance was full of innocence ; and
where love and innocence are present, the truths of faith
are received as it were spontaneously and with joy. He
was afterwards received amongst the Angels.' t
Governments in Heaven.
Heaven is one as the Human Body is one : fearfully and
wonderfully as that Body is made, it is but a rough cast of
a finer internal spiritual Body ; and that again is the little
image of a Grand Man constituted of the Universe of
Angels.
Since Heaven is one, a compact unity of which a hale
* Probably quite true ; but what a large iofcronoc from a small cxperionoe !
t No. 324.
472 ANQELIC GOYBBNMEHT.
and comelj Human Body is the fairest emblem, it is evident
ihat order and subordination must prevail throughoat all
its regions; and as order and subordination do not come
of themselves, there are necessarily Gh>YemmentB whereby
they are realized.
^ The Governments of Heaven are various ; of one sort
in the Societies of the Celestial Kingdom, and of another
sort in the Societies of the Spiritual Kingdom : they differ
likewise according to the function of each Sodety ; but in
all the Government is that of Mutual Love ; there is no
other Government in Heaven.
^ The Angels of each Society are in similar Gx>odne88,
but not in simUar Wisdom ; and Governors are distinguished
by excess of Wisdom over their fellows, lliey will well
to all, and, by their superior intelligence, know how to
effect the good they will. They do not domineer, but
minister and serve. They do not make themselves greater
than others, but less ; for they put the good of their
Societies in the first place, and their own good in the laat.
Nevertheless they enjoy honour and glory, for they dwell
in the midst of their Societies in magnificent palaces on
elevated sites ; but they accept glory and honour, not for
their own sake, but for the sake of obedience, and for the
satisfaction of those who render it.
A like Government prevails in every heavenly House-
hold. ' There is a master and there are servants : the
master loves the servants, and the servants love the
master; and so they serve each other from love. The
master teaches the servants how they ought to live, and
directs them what to do, and the servants obey with heart,
head and hands. To be useful is the life's delight of every
Angel ; and thus the Kingdom of the Lord is a Kingdom
of Uses.'*
* Nofi. 2l3to210.
everV anqbl in BUSikEas, 47d
I
The ImploymenJta cf the AngeU^
Heaven is a world of business, not of idleness. Every
Angel has an employment in perfect correspondence with
his disposition and intellect ; and from the fnlfilment of his
duty, springs the joy of his existence. Here on Earthy
many are wretched because they are set to work with which
their nature has no congruity ; but in the exquisite organi-
zation of Heaven every office is filled with an officer whoso
natural character is at one with his function ; and hence
each detail of heavenly afiairs is transacted with the peculiar
efficiency of genius. Every Angel does what he loves to
do ; and under the Divine Administration this perfect free-^
dom is reconciled with perfect order — ' co-ordinated and
^ subordinated to one general Use, which is the Common
* Good;*
There are none of our earthly drudgeries in Heaven ; no
dress-making, no house-building, no bread-finding ;t no
languages to learn, reading and writing as easy as speech,
and travel as easy as thought ; for where an Angel desires
to be, there he finds himself. There are however no
sinecures in Heaven; no one there receives anything for
nothing ; the income of an Angel, as expressed in the mag^
nificence of his garniture, is measured strictly by his useful-
ness ; every eye may read the one in the other.
^ It is impossible to' enumerate or describe specifically the
' Employments of Heaven : they are innumerable, and com-
^ pared with them, those known on Earth are few. There
^ are ecclesiastical affairs, civil affairs, and domestic affairs in
^ every Society. Some Societies spend their energies in the
^ nurture of Infants, others educate Children, others instruct
^ the Simple from Christendom, others instruct the Gentiles,
^ others attend Souls in their transition by death from Earth
• Ko. 392. t Nos- IIH) and 393.
474 A 0AY IN HEAVEH.
* to Spirit, others protect New Comers frcHii the wiles of Evil
^ Spirits, others minister to their necessities during their
^ probation in the World of Spirits, and others are present
^ with those who are in Hell preventing nndue mischieC In
^ general, all Angels are associated with Mankind, and by
^ their influence restrain sinful desires and thoughts. All
^ these Uses are effected by the Lord through the Angels ;
^ the Angels do not perform them of themselves, but from
* the Lord .♦
* To live for others is to perform Uses. Uses are the
^ bonds of Society, and their number is infinite. The
^ delights of the love of Uses are ten thousand times ten
^ thousand ; and all who enter into Heaven, enter into those
* deKghts.'t
The order and distribution of daily duties differ, of course,
in different Societies, but it may be interesting to learn, that
in one heavenly city which Swedenborg visited, the inhabi-
tants were wakened in the morning by sweet songs of virgins
resounding through the streets. During the forenoon the
whole city was silent ; no noise was heard in any part, nor
any person seen loitering in the streets : all were busy within
doors. At noon, boys and girls came forth to play, and their
masters and mistresses sat in the porches of their houses
watching their games and keeping order. Outside the city,
young men and boys held various sport, such as running,
tennis, etc. The boys were also tested as to their quickness
of wit in perception, speech and action, and the successful
were rewarded with leaves of laurel. Concerts and theatres
were provided for the entertainment of the older folks. In
the theatres of Heaven the actors represent the graces and
virtues of moral life ; nothing vile is allowed t6 appear on
the heavenly stage ; wickedness if mentioned, is only hinted
» Not. 891-393. t 'De Amort Conjvgiali: No. 18.
ALL SEUUTB FJ20M MAMKJMtK 415
at ; and tho angdlc playwright obtains bis effects bj con-
trasting degrees of goodness and degrecB of tmth.*
An Angels and all Devils were once Men*
^ It is altogether unknown in Christendom, that Heaven
and Hell are from the Human Race. It is believed that
Angels were created Angels at the beginning, and that this
was the origin of Heaven ; that the Devil or Satan was an
Angel of Light, who became rebellions, and was cast down
from Heaven with his adherents, and that this was the
origin of Hell.
^ The Angels are amazed, that such notions should pre-
vail, but rejoice in heart, that it has pleased the Lord now
to reveal to Mankind many particulars concerning Heaven
and Hell, and thus as far as possible, to dispel the dark-
ness, which is every day increasing, because the Church is
come to its end.
*' The ^Vngels therefore desire me to state, that there is
not a eungle Angel in the Universal Heaven, who was
originally created an Angel, nor any Devil in Hell, who
was created an Angel of Light and aflerwards cast down
thither ; but that all, both in Heaven and Hell, are from
the Human Race ; that Ang^ were once Men who lived
on Earth in heavenly love and faith, and that Devils were
once Men who lived in infernal love and faith.' f
7%€ Immensity of Heaven.
^ That Heaven is immense is evident from the fact, that
*' all who have lived in goodness from Creati(m are there.
' How vast is the multitude who inhabit our Earth is known
^ to all who are conversant with its geography ; and it is
^ calculated, that of them thousands die every day and some
* millions every year. This mortality commenced from the
• 'Dc Amort Conjugiali; No. 17. t No, 311.
476 iMMEsasrrt Of hkavex.
^ earliest timeB, IliaafiaiidB ijf years a^; hit bow numjIimTe
^ becmae Angeie. and how manj ii<nr beoome Angt^ it is
^ miposslble to sar. I hare been toli, that in Andent Times,
^ tbe jield of Angels was verr nnmerons, bat tbat in sac-
^ eeedini^ ages tlie bearenlj namboY feQ off.
^ Hat tbe Hearen of tbe Lord is immense follows from
^ tbe nngle com^deration* that all little dbOdren, wheresoever
^ bont, are adopted br the Lord and beoome Angels. Wbat
^a mnltitiide from tMs soaree alone must have entered
* Ueaven since Creation !
^ I'hen^ too, we most remember th&t oar Elarth is bat a
^little one in an innameraUe host of Planets, populated
^with Men and Wornen^, and qualifying like ourselves for
* existence in Heaven.'*
Reverting to his favourite analogj of Heaven to a Man
in every particular, he tells us —
* The correspondence between them can never be com-
* pletely filled up ; for it is not only a correspondence with
* every member, organ and viscus of the Body in general,
* but with all and each of the minute viscera and organs, yea
* with every single vessel and every single fibre ; and not
^ with tli(;He only, but with the delicate organic substances
* which most closely subserve the operations of the Mind.'f
The perfection of the Heavenly Form increases with
uuinl>(;rs —
' hi number is variety, and in well-arranged variety is
* perf(5ction. Every angelic Society therefore finds its profit
^ in its daily accession of Spirits from Earth ; and in the
* growth of each Society the Universal Heaven prospers.
* Hence it is plain how much they are deceived, who fancy
* Heaven will be closed as soon as it is full. On the contrary,
* Heaven will never be closed, for the greater its fullness the
♦• Noi. 416-417. t No. 418.
WHO CAN ABIDE IN HEAVEN. 477
* greater its perfection ; and therefore the Angels desire
* nothing more earnestly than to receive new-comers, •
^ It has been granted me to behold the extent of Heaven
^ which is inhabited, and also that which is not inhabited ;
^ and I saw tliat the extent of Heaven not inhabited is so
^ vaAt, that myriads of Earths as thickly peopled as our own
* could not fill it to all eternity.'t
Character is the only Passport to Heaven.
Tt has been observed, that wherever there is a Man whoso
Ruling Love is benevolent, there is an Angel, and wherever
there is one whose Euling Love is selfish, there is a Devil.
Now Character, as determined by the Ruling Love, is after
death fixed and unchangeable, and by no process of conjura-
tion can infernal Character be transmuted into heavenly.
Mt is commonly supposed, that entrance into Heaven is a
* gift of free mercy to such as have faith and for whom the
* Lord intercedes ; or, in other words, that it is an exercise
* of arbitrary Divine favour, and that all might be saved if
* it were the Lord's pleasure ; yea, some even go further, and
^ fancy, that did He choose. Hell might be transformed to
* Heaven. These notions betray complete ignorance of the
* nature and constitution of Heaven.
' The greater part of those who enter the Spiritual
* World from Christendom imagine, that if only allowed to
^ pass the gates of Heaven, eternal bliss would be ensured.
* They are told for their instruction, that Heaven is not
* denied to any one by the Lord, and that if they please,
* they may go there and stay as long as they like. When
* however they make the attempt, they are seized at the
* very threshold with such anguish, that, in their torment^
* they cast themselves down headlong.
' Ample experience enables me to testify, that it is im-
♦ No. 71. t No. 410.
474
M *Mtmmaia» hftuwalj EEfe t» dose wfa» tare
trvtfei sfotr #feicb fin>m d^ Izp« of Ajig^ aB#i t&erewidi
anwui/l dMtr Yakiau w^m fdhjectd to due experiniait.
${^M»ft of db#m lEB^ferrtnoii dbe trvAs tber kari^ aad
^fftmnA t/> «!«;^!pt tli»ii ; bit prmsthr. wium left to than-
ii0ir0:^^ thfj^ r^j^scUnLr mnd erem argvcd zgainstj what ikej
hikd kameiL Otbers denied tfce trnths &§ qniekl j as thej
irere fp^k^ii. Thmis were some ^fpcnts wiia wislicd their
ruling H«lf^I»Te tMmwerVtd into Hearenhr I>!>Te^ and the
trial ira# made ; but wlica tbetr SeI&L»Te was taken awaj,
ihf^ bad BO life left and laj aa if dead.
^ From tbeae aad similar experiments. Good faints were
eonrifiired diat so diange in Character is possible after
deaths that eril life cannot be tnmed into good life, nor a
iMril into sa AngeL Ererj Spirit b from head to foot of
the same qttalitj as his Baling Love ; and to transmute
that Ty>Te into another Lore wonld be to destroy him
altogetbrrr^ — would be to create another being. ^Thc
Angels declare that it wonld be easier to change a bat into
a dore, or an owl into a bird of paradise, than a DevO into
an Angel.*'
^ Hence, Hearen and Hell are so ntterlj separated, that
a Hpirit who is in Hell dare not raise the crown of his
liitad, or i!Vfm put forth a finger out of it ; for just as he
thn^n NO, in lie tortured and tormented. This I have often
^l*ti(i irnpoMNibility of change after death is an awful
thought, hut it IS an inevitable deduction from that law of
th« Hpiritual World, which Swedcnborg so copiously illus-
tration, nauiely, that the Mind of a Spirit governs his circum-
MtatK*eN, and that therefore he can only associate with Spirits
• Nm. 591 snd Ml. t No. 400.
EAST TO GET TO HEAVEN. 479
like himself, and only hear and see what is in harmony with
his nature. It is very plain, that under such conditions,
growth (in the sense of access of new powers) is impossible.
An earthly tyrant we are accustomed to commiserate, since
surrounded with courtiers who echo his opinions and flatter
his prejudices, he is shut off from instruction and correction :
yet such is precisely the fitte of every one who by death is
transferred from the objective phenomena of Earth to the
subjective phenomena of Spirit.
In the foregoing descriptions of the economy of the
Heavens, the reader will scarcely have failed to remark the
vein of shrewd good sense which pervades the whole. If
even their Author be pronounced a dreamer, it will surely
be confessed, that never were dreams so reasonable, or so
like transcripts of realities. Swedenborg's practical temper
stands out in bold relief in the chapter wherein he informs
us —
^ That it 18 not so Difficulty as many suppose^ to live the Life
* which leads to Heaven.
^ Some people imagine, that it is dii&cult to live the Life
^ which leads to Heaven. They have been told, that to live
^ spiritually, the world with its riches and honours must be
^ renounced, the flesh denied its pleasures, and existence be
^ devoted to meditation on God, salvation and eternal life,
^ and in reading the Word and other pious books.
^ That the truth is far otherwise has been revealed to me
^ by much experience and conversation with Angels.
* In order that a Man may receive the Life of Heaven it
^ is necessary, that he live in the World and engage in its
^ business ; for thus by a Moral and Civil Life he receives
^ Spiritual Life ; nor can he receive Spiritual Life and be-
* come fitted for Heaven in any other way ; for to live an
^ Internal Life, and not at the same time an External Life, is
^ like dwelling in a house which has no foundation, and
4^ V£
<»f tik%;tit LiT^ b p<fific& J <kdac: : 2^ tMre are
^ v/Ea^ M<T* -m^i 2:t> a Chil Lot Imii »>t a Moral and
^ i^Y^riir*^ VHk ; ^rU^in irre a 3&9nl Li£b a«t mot a Spxrxmal ;
^ vhViJtt 'nt^^k cr/mrAXk^ t^ tkree. aa4 tLea^r lire the Life of
TLIft AiMUbf^n^ and tLe £urt of ta^ j^pararion of diese
JJir^ UiUMt lie witbia tike exp^erie&ce of everjoce : Sweden-
bor^'ii p^:uli^ij eoiL¥Ut« in the aeaertloa of the impossl-
Uiitj of the f^zutence of Spiritoal Life onles^ mvested in
Moral and Ciril IJfe —
^ r^piritual IJfe h conjoined with CitiI and Moral Life
^ lU tb#; Houl IK with the Bodj, and if sundered therefrom, it
^ would U; like a hotme without foondition. Moral and Civil
^ i^ife in t/u rjirJum of Spiritual Life ; for Spiritual Life cou-
* MfntA in v/dllnrj v:eU^ and Moral and Civil Life in acting
H4p much premised, he proceeds to argue, that to live
spiritually is a matter of no great difficulty —
^ For nearly everybody lives a Civil and Moral Life.
^ Who doe» not Htrive to be reputed sincere and just?
^ AlmoMt all Men are outwardly honest and upright/§
Now tlie »Spiritual Man is not under any obligation to
live difTerently from the Civil and the Moral Man, or to
dirfjy himself any pleasures which they enjoy; he is simply
rijijuinid ^/ A^; what they seem —
^ lie is sincere and just, not merely because Moral and
^ (yjvil Laws rer{uire,but because Divine Law commands. In
^ ull iiis oetloiis, his thoughts refer themselves to the Divine
» No. m, t No, 62\f. i No. 529. { No. 530.
THE HEAVENLY QUALIFICATION. 481
^ Will, and thereby ho is unconsciouslj, but actually, united
^ with Angels and adopted and led by the T^ord.
^ There appears no difference between the conduct of
^ the Spiritual Man and the Civil and Moral Man ; but the
' simUarity is no deeper than appearance. The Civil and
^ Moral Man does what is right because he dreads the law,
^ and the loss of reputation and profit ; and if not restrained
' by such fears, he would commit any act, which he might
^ deem advantageous. Such a man has Hell within him.
^ The Spiritual Man does what is right because to do wrong
^ would be to sin against God and his Neighbour ; and there-
^ fore though no eye regard him, his behaviour is unaffected
^ — he still deals righteously. Such a Man has Heaven
^ within him. Hence it is clear, that though the conduct of
^ the Heavenly and the Infernal Man be externally alike,
^ they are internally altogether dissimilar.'*
All then which a Man has to do to qualify for Heaven is
to govern his conduct by spiritual motives —
^ When anything enters his Mind which he knows to
^ be insincere and unjust, but which he is inclined to do,
^ nothing more is necessary than that he should reflect, that
^ it ought not to be done because contrary to the Divine
^ Commandments. As he accustoms himself so to think, and
^acquires a habit from that custom, he is gradually con-
^ joined to Heaven When he has made a beginning,
^ the Lord operates within him and produces all kinds of
^ goodness, and enables him not only to see his evils, but to
* reject them from his heart, and finally to hold them in
* aversion. This is meant by the Lord's words — ^^ My yoke
* " is easy and my burden is light." 'f
Provided then, that God is thus inwardly revered and
obeyed, there is no need that a Man should deny himself
in anything —
• Not. 358 and 530. f No. 533.
2 I
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" iStt: SUV* j(9^ mi jpwtty ak fduon 'to*
^ «ucaniit "ii iM .'inir «ii£ •Bniiv mK ginflHrts ac
"OL Ite £lf«iKJDIS« llf ^it LilTOi 'IE Stti^ Silt 3« WikU
^mmiwsani: fewn. mag grufftimmannr m tto
Ix s&it Mout Kzaca lut «aammut% —
^aisnnuiiad:^ v^afsb. pv«micii tte 011911)7' ^'' oDusKr ^r
cIm Im tfciwlfi livcfl in magwifaimge aet<ic£zLz so kcs encase :
due Im AfMiA dMLTcne ait «ca«r» jr>. fineipcict pLKc» of
anusbMtzMikt. aai^ Imsr hnn^rff in wvrlnfiT a&cnL Tkere
u a^jr ftit^tiMKtj iW kin &» aacaae a d«fTq«c aapcct. a sad
#t//aftVAjacfi/t^. ^yr iMr hao;? k» bead : lie Euay be slad and
«iw«rfttl : nr^r u fa« OMopeUcd tf> r^re tt> tke Poor, except
«/# iar an fMb M ttM^red br affccti«>fi. la mlc vocd. ke ma^
Ur^ oatir;krdir aa a Man of the World, and saeii eondact
viU b//t hiudfir hoM adnuiaion to HeaTetu if onir lie thinks
imUigwrly lu a htcfMUMkg manner of God. and in aii bnjiness
dMkla rit^ttrfunlj with hia Xeighboor/f
Frr^m certain expreaaiona in the letter of the Holr
H^piur^f it baa been inferred that the Rich cannot enter
llMtLW^m ; \fui thia ia altogether a mistake —
^ Ir'rffm mudb eonveniation and experience among Angela^
it baa been giren me to know most certainly that the Rich
<;rit^r Hearen aa eaailj aa the Poor ; that no one is excluded
from Heaven beeanae he haa lived in abondance, and that
no onis ia admitted beeanae he haa beoi poor. Rich and
iVir alike have entered Hearen, and manj who have been
• No. ttd. t No. 368.
SEDUCTIONS OF POVBBTY. 483
rich enjoy greater glory and happiness than those who
have been poor.
* The Poor do not go to Heaven on account of their
poverty, but on account of their life ; for whether a Man
be rich or poor, he is what his life is, and if he live well he
is received, and if he live ill he is rejected.
* Besides, Poverty seduces and withdraws Men from
Heaven as much as Biches ; for great numbers of the Poor
are discontented with their lot, are greedy^ and imagine
wealth to be a real blessing. They are angry, therefore,
and cherish bitter thoughts concerning the Divine Provi-
dence. They also envy the possessions of others, and are
as ready as the wicked among the rich to defraud, and to
live in sordid pleasures when they have the chance. It is
otherwise with the Poor who are at peace with their lot,
who are careful and diligent in their occupations, who love
work better than idleness, who act honestly and live a
Christian life.'*
By the Rich in the Scriptures, Swedenborg explains, is
meant those who are in knowledges of truth, and by Poor
those who are in ignorance. Now to be rich in knowledge
is to be fortunate, and to be poor is to be miserable ; but if
knowledge is held in conceit — if used, not to live by and to
do good with, but for intellectual display, then knowledge is
a Man's condemnation, and viewed from Heaven he is as
poor as, from the infernal side of his self-love, he fancies
himself rich. Opulence is only a real blessing when held in
the spirit of poverty, when the owner feels that all that he
has is a gift from the instant Divine Goodness. Whenever
any one gets proud of his possessions, let him be assured he
is breathing the atmosphere of Hell, which is delusion and
falsehood. True as this is of mental wealth, it is equally
true of pecuniary wealth ; and bearing these facts in mind,
^ — — — • m I *
• No*. 357, 860, 364 and 865.
2 I 2
4a4 WBfgmi«r. SAzm.
wt can pcx^uiLic ^ut Escnf tDBvdk lif lihf paBM^ia ia tbe
Bkk : i>r. EzuinfiL * It: i» cana- liir s ciHudl ci» faa» ^kro^k
*" ike rre 4f a msmtiS^ cfcsL nr a nek bob x» ottcr iBt» tke
^ Kia^pirMn «c G*]4' — dkoc a&. a ■oa vk4 ckisks Uaaclf
rick. wfcii> ftnAm kimiic&r bk fmirffirairr. wki» citJiu. kia
mmant prvicaee wick k^ rwk «r k» niBaftr niclltct vHk
kbidcacc^
Cottggraiiig tke fee of tka«evki^> kire^ rtiiiea to acqaiie
a thkr to kcaTcnlj giorj l?* saBccbiioKj ami
* I kare CMiTcncd witk SpEritSi. wko wkile on £artk«
rmoiEiiccil tke world. adEcted tkcnkscircs in rarioos wars«
and retired into »idSrtade for piovs meditation, witk tke end
of securing preferment in Hearen. Most <^ tkcm are of
a forrowfnl temper, and quite inc^iable id association witk
Angels wkose kabit is gladness and ckeerfulnessa. Thev
despise wboerer is not as gloomj as themselTes : tkej care
notbing for others and abhor usefulness, and are indignant
wken tbcT do not receire the honour ther consider due to
their ascetic merits. When introduced among Angels and
behold their bright and jovfbl actiritT, ther are amaxed as
thoogfa thej saw things incrediUe ; and feeling themsdrea
oat of place, thej retire and consort with Souls melancholy
as themselTes^t
^ Hnch as have lived in outward sanctitr, assiduouslv
frequenting churches, and devoting themselves to puUic
prayer and mortification with the hope of leaving on Earth
a saintly memory, do not go to Heaven, because they have
done all these things from a selfish motive. Some of these
Pietists are so insane as to fancy themselves gods and find
their lot in Hell. Others, who by their pious arts have
cunningly sdaght to persuade the common people, that in
t Nos. 360, £88 sod 535.
SWEDENBORO'S COMMON SENSE. 485
^ them resided a divine sanctity, are cast into the Hells of
^ the Deceitful : many of the Roman Catholic Saints are of
^ this character/
A sonmiary of the whole argument is thus pithily
given —
^ These statements are made in order to shew, that the
^ Life which leads to Heaven is not a Life of retirement froA^
* the World but of action in the World. A Life of Charity,
^ which consists in acting sincerely and justly in every situa-
*' tion, engagement and work in obedience to the Divine Law,
^ is not difficult ; but a Life of Piety alone is difficult ; and
^ such a Pious Life leads away from Heaven as much %A it is
* vulgarly believed to lead to Heaven.'*
Swedenborg is popularly classed with the I^Iystics, but
no reader of the preceding passages will ever be betrayed
into that mistake. Not Franklin himself could have devised
a more satisfactory method of getting to Heaven ; and long
ere Binncy taught London apprentices how Religion and
Business were to be reconciled, our Author had settled the
question, ^ Is it possible to make the best of Both Worlds?*
Nor is this spirit — this worldly spirit, some will say — in any
way peculiar to the present Chapter : it transfuses the whole
of his Writings : and we may be sure, that if he saw Visions,
he allowed no one in ordinary affairs to mistake him for a
Visionary. In this respect he was the true heir of his
worthy father, the Bishop — he who while he conversed with
Angels and wrought Miracles, could in one breath, write to
his son Jesper, arrived from abroad and out of work, ^ Thank
^ (rod you are not married I See that you get a good wife,
^ and something with her. Pray God to lead you in his
*holy way.'t
• No. d35. t Sqo proscnt Tolame, page 74.
486 HEAVEN A5D HELL ANTAQOHISTB.
The Hells.
Hell is the asaemblj of the Selfish, of all who love them-
selves supremely, and gpratifj their lasts at anj cost to
others. Hell is thus the reverse of Heaven in which all
prefer the welfare of others to their own. In Hell, Self-
LfOve, which in right order forms the circumference of
Human Natare, is the heart and entire life of the Devil — he
is nothing but Selfishness, and regards others as mere
implements whereby he maj obtain power, or praise, or
pleasure.
The Societies of Hdl
The law whereby Angels congregate into Societies pre-
vails with equal force in Hell —
^ Hell is distinguished into Societies in the same manner
^ as Heaven, and their number is exactly the same. Every
* Heavenly Society has its antipodes in an Infernal Society,
^ and this arrangement is for the sake of equilibrium.'*
I'his appalling statement Swedenborg sustains with the
following reasons —
* Every Good has an opposite Evil and every Truth an
^ opposite Lie : neither is anything without relation to its
* opposite, for by opposites quality and intensity arc revealed,
^ and all perception and sensation excited. The Lord there-
* fore continually provides, that every Heavenly Society
^ should have an opposite in Hell, and that thus an
' (Hiuilibrium should be maintained between them.'f
All this may be true : we certainly could never know the
HW<M',tno«H and peace of righteousness save through the
lMtt<?rn<»Hs aud torment of sin, the joy of light save through
» No. 541. t No. 541,
THE ORDER OF THE HELLS. 487
tho horror of darkness, the valne of health save through the
cost of sickness, the charm of beauty save through the offence
of ugliness : all sensation and perception are indeed excited
through acquaintance with opposites ; it seems impossible to
conceive how we could have anj sense of pleasure except
through experience of pain : yet these admissions involve
just such startling consequences as Swedcnborg states, and
which, even he, as we shall presently see, lacked courage
to face, and in the Divine defence, anxiously excused and
disowned.
^ As there are Three Heavens there are Three Hells.
The Deepest Hell is opposed to the Inmost Heaven, tho
Middle Hell to the Middle Heaven, and the Highest Hell
to the Lowest Heaven.
^ The Infernal Societies are distinguished according to
the Evils which are opposed to the Virtues. Every Evil
includes infinite varieties like every Good : every Evil con-
tains so many specific differences, and every specific differ-
ence so many particulars, that a volume would not suffice
to enumerate them all.
^ The Hells are arranged so distinctly according to these
differences, that nothing more orderly and distinct can bo
conceived. From this also it is plain, that the Hells are
innumerable, and that they are near or remote from each
other according to general, specific, and particular differ-
ences. There are Hells beneath Hells ; some communicating
by passages and more by exhalations ; but all communica-
tions are regulated by the affinities between the several
kinds of Evil.
^ That the number of Hells is very great has been proved
to me by the consideration, that there are Hells under
every mountain, hill and rock, and under every plain and
valley in the Spiritual World; and they extend beneath
them in length, breadth and depth. In a word, the whole
of I leaven and the whole of the World of Spirits are, as it
488 PHTBIOGVOMT OF DEYIL8.
^ were, ezcarated^ and a ocmtinuoiis Hdl stretdies beneaUi
*thcm-'*
The Ugliness of Devils,
As Angels are beautiful in the d^^ree of their goodness,
Devils are nglj in the degree of their badness. Every
Devil is the effigj of his pecoliar selfishness, and displays
his character in his countenance, body, speech and gestures.
^ Devils are forms of contempt of others, of menace
^ against those who do not pay them respect, of hatred and
^ revenge ; and in their forms, outrage and cruelty are mani-
^ fest ; but when honour and homage are rendered to them,
^ their faces pucker with delight.
^ It is impossible to give in brief a description of the
^ forms of Devils. No two are alike, although there is a
^ family resemblance in those, who are in the same kind of
^ evil, and therefore in the same Society.
^ In general their faces are direful and corpse-like ; some
^ are black, others fiery like little torches, others studded
^ with pimples, warts and ulcers ; frequently no face appears,
^ but instead something hairy and bony, and sometimes
^ nothing but grates of teeth. Their bodies are monstrous.
^ Their speech is the speech of anger, malice and deceit.' f
As everyone in the Spiritual World is clothed according
to his intelligence, the insanity of each Devil is represented
in garments, ragged and filthy ; nor can a Devil dress other-
wise, nor indeed feel comfortable except in such raiment as
matches his character.}
As each Heavenly Society is in the Human Form and
Heaven as a whole is a Grand Man, so Hell as a whole is
one Grand Monster, and all its Societies so many lesser
Monsters —
^ It has not been granted me,' says Swedenborg, ^ to sec
• Mof, 548 and M8. f No. j>53. ^ No. 182.
INFERNAL SCENERY. 489
^ the form of the Universal Hell, bat the specific forms of
^ Infernal Societies have frequently been revealed to me :
* for at their apertures or gates in the World of Spirits
^ there usaally sits a monster, which represents the common
* form of the Devils who belong thereto.'*
The Scenery of the Hdls.
It was observed that in Heaven what an Angel is, he
sees ; that his house and scenery correspond with his mental
condition, that the invisible order and loveliness within are
repeated in visible order and loveliness without. Bj the
operation of the same law,t the scenery of the Hells is a
creation of the Minds of the Devils — what a Devil is, ho
sees.
^ I have been permitted to look into the Hells, and to see
^ what kind of places thej are.
^ Some appear like holes in the rocks ; others like the
• No. 553.
t Carlyle recognizes the lame Uw at work on Earth : he writet-*
* The Spiritual is the parent and first caase of the Practical. The Spiiitoal
' every where orig^inatcs the Practical, models it, makes it ; so that the saddest
' external condition of afikirs among men is but eWdence of a still sadder
* internal one. For as thought is the life-fountain and motiye-soul of action,
' so, in all regions of this human world, whatever outward thing offers itself
' to the eye, is merely the body or garment of a thing which already existed
' inrbibly within, which, striring to giro itself expression, has found, in the
'gpyen circumstances, that i^ could and would express itself— so. This is
' every where true ; and in these times when men's attention is directed out-
' ward rather, this desenres fiur more attention than it will reoeiTe.' — 'Zotter-
' Z>ay FampkUti'-^etuiHtm,* page 251.
The difference between the action of the Law of Gorrespondenoe in the
Spiritual and in the Material Worids is merely a diflisrenoe of speed. In the
Spiritual World, Mind gorems Curcomstance instantaneously — in the Material
World, gradually. In the slowness with which Circumstance here yields to
Mind lies our present opportunity of salration, inasmuch as Truths at rarianoe
with our affections can be applied for the cure of their maladies. In the
Spiritual World, on the other hand, the influence of Mind is so omnipotent
that nothing out of harmony with its inclinations can touch or approach it.
Herein we discern the reason why correction and amendment become impcs-
bible after death.
490
^ eorerU of w3d beasts in the woods ; snd othiers like vaulted
^ caTems and hidden chambers, sncfa as are seen in mines.
^ In some Hells there appear, as it were, the mins of
' honses and cities after a g^eral conflagration, in which
' Infernal Spirits InriL, In the milder Hells there appear, as
^ it were, mde cottages, which in some cases form lanes and
^ streets. Within the houses Infernal Spirits engage in
^ perpetual brawls, in blows and butchery, while the streets
* are infested with robbers. In some Hells there are dis-
^ gusting brothels, strewn and smeared with every kind of
^ filth. There are likewise thick forests in whidi Evil Spirits
^ prowl like beasts of prej, and hide themselves in under-
* ground dens when pursued bj others : also deserts where
^ all is sterile and sandj, with here and there shaggy rocks
^ containing caves, and in other places, huts.'*
Every Devil and Satan procures a retreat in agreement
with his character —
^ Those who love falsehood and hate truth seek darkness
^ in clefts of rocks : it is delightful to them to inhabit such
^ holes, and undelightful to dwell in the open fields. Those
^ whoso joy is intrigue and conspiracy resort to subterranean
^ rooms, where it is so dark that they cannot see one another,
^ and there whisper in each other's ears in comers. Those
^ who study the sciences with no other end than the repu-
^ tation of learning, and who do not cultivate the rational
^ faculties by means of them, but merely take a vain delight
* in a prodigious memory, frequent sandy places in preference
* to fields and gardens. Theologians who do not reduce
^ precept to practice choose rocky spots and lodge amid
* heaps of stones, shunning cultivated regions. Those who
* ascrilio the Universe to Nature, and discern no Providence
* beyond the Prudence wherewith they have acquired money
^ and fame, practise Magic, and in the art find the pleasure
« No. 586.
INFERNAL HORROBS. 491
of their existence. Those who apply divine tmUis to
selfish ends, and thus falsify them, love urinous places and
scents. Those who are sordidly avaricious dwell in cellars
and luxuriate in the filth of swine, and such nidorous
odours as arise from undigested food in the stomach.
Those Who place the highest good of life in the pleasures
of the table wallow in dunghills and privies, and abhor
clean places. Those who delight in adulteries dwell in
mean and squalid brothels, and avoid chaste houses, and
faint away if they come near them. The revengeful, who
have contracted a savage and cruel nature from their lust
of vengeance, love to dwell amongst graves and corpses :
and so on in other instances.'*
Sdf-Lav€j the Cause of these Horrors,
Some of these details are disgusting, and worse might
be adduced, but as such are the issues of every Heart in
which Self-Love bears sway, it would be pernicious delicacy
to blink them. At first they surprised Swedenborg —
' I wondered how Self-Love and Love of the World
should be so diabolical, and that those who are in such
Loves should be such monsters, since Self-Love is so little
thought of on Earth, where Pride, which is the outward
sign of an inflated Mind, is alone considered Self-Love,
because visibly offensive. Self-Love, when not so puffed
up, is thought to be the fire of life by which Man is incited
to aspire to offices and perform uses ; and it is contended,
that he would grow torpid unless roused by the desire for
power and glory .f The World demands, " Who ever did
^^ any worthy, useful, or distinguished action except for the
^^ sake of admiration ? and what is this but the Love of
* No. 488.
t E.G.— "Mr. Disraeli, Champion of the Charch of England, in a speech
at Buckingham, 17th September, 1862, asserted, that * The principle of ema-
' lation is the origin and foundation of eTorything that is excellent in Man«'
4SH i^xuM jks mxs wt xibgtik
^*^iMir Tbtti it k not kBowB « Endi Ikat Sctf-Lore
^ is tlie I>VTe wUdb prerails in HdL a&d oimtiUitci Hefl in
*' HboLf and ii tbe wtmrot of crerr EtQ ad erenr Lie.**
HorriUe m are Swedoibor^^'s pietnm of die lldls, he
pretentu them under a most important q[nalification — tbej
are tketdied from a hearenlj, not an infernal aspect, in the
Liglit of Hearen, not in the light of HelL Unless this be
br/me in mind a rerj serious misconception wiU be formed
of his meaning. If Hell is horriUe to the Angels, he tells
ns, Heaven is intolerable to the Devils ; what one Kingdom
prefers the other abhors, and vice verwd: in every sense
thej are antipodes, as he iUnstrates bv this bit of visual
experience^
^ In looking out of Heaven upon Hell nought is seen
^ but the hinder parts of the heads and backs of its inhalnt-
' ants ; indeed thej appear as if inverted, like antipodes,
^ with their feet upwards and their heads downwards,
^ although thej walk upright and turn their faces in every
* direction. I have myself been an eye-witness of these
^ extra^^rdlnary phenomena.^t
In further illustration of the same Law of Appearance
wc arc informed, that Devils are seen by Angels * as wild
* hi*,Mtn of every kind, as tigers, leopards, wolves, foxes,
* dogn, crocodiles, serpents,' and that when any of us on
Earth, who may be internally devilish, are discerned by
AngcU it is in such bestial guise as corresponds to our
specific diabolism ]\ but be it most carefiilly noted —
' Whatever may bo the appearance of Infernal Spirits to
* Angels, amonffat themselves they are Men — and according to
* tlirir phfintasies not without beauty.^ This is of the Lord'*8
* No. 666. t ' Vera ChrMana ReUgio; No. 613.
i *Vsra Okriitkma Bdigi;* No. 312. } 'Arcana CteUUia,' No. 4,533.
DARKNESS OF HELL. 493
mercj in order that thej maj not be as loathsome to each
other as they are to the Angels ; bat the mercifiil appear-
ance is an illusion, for as soon as a raj of the Light of
Iloaven is let into any Hell, the monstrous shapes of its
inhabitants are revealed, because in the Light of Heaven
everything appears as it really is. Hence Infernal Spirits
shun the Light of Heaven as a pestilence, and seek their
own Light, which is as that of Charcoal and, in some cases,
of Sulphur.'*
The Darkness of Hell.
Hell in the Scriptures and in the common opinion of
Mankind is held to be a realm of darkness ; and so indeed it
id to the Angels, but to the Devils its gloom is altogether
congenial. Devils, we need hardly iterate, are forms of
Selfishness, and it is the lot of Selfishness to be stupid, to
believe in means as ends, to live in lies; for as Carlyle
observes, ^ Stupidity Intellectual always means Stupidity
^ Moral as you will, with surprise or not, discover if you
^ look.'t In Hell, mental darkness is repeated in outer
darkness ; and the density of the darkness we may imagine
if we reflect, that every Truth out of harmony with Selfish-
ness is rejected by Hell.
There are no phenomena in the Spiritual World of which
we have not the hints, having the germs, on Earth ; and in
the lunacy of Avarice, a common form of Selfishness, we
may perceive a condition which must terminate in the black-
ness of the pit. The Avaricious love money for the sake of
money, pinch and screw and thieve to acquire gain, for what
they know not ! Tantalus up to his lips in the lake from
which he could never drink, Sisyphus eternally rolling his
• No8. 131, 553, 571, 5S5; 'Vera Ckriitiana ReUffio,* No. 2S1 ; 'Arctma
Cctleatia* Nos. 3,641, 4,674, 4,S89, 5,067-58, 6,626, and nuuiy otbor plaoei.
t 'Latter-Day FunqMeti—Modd /VifOM.'
Ittttttt: 'H' 'iut IMWIIItlll TMUi-'tM: JsK^Bf^OBt ioe" 'IWU. HIIIIQHI^
•MMMT juut -iimas affveb. mat vaMtaam if JEk^vcaBk. S^mr if
UruiL w: Viae m. if -u jmnr TTJmii: is :D' iainir -vuc w. if
14/ lit vjM: lOiC jonn^ Jt ii> lit iinm^c am sumssikaL 'S' iSif-
UntSL. loic lufsnsimr iini; ricoc Tnaninrt sac iburmiioev' ^
-whasL M. nfloiiiucnr tiis: Ijvwrisasta^ cwbL jl be ■xmugrtMR
uf iriA. jir iitfET' -amk -viae « hr. ibi£ «mig^ wbssr
waiufiL vaBL urr-tr M: wammf r i^imr isvi jmc innst s it
i^w;C ':;ii*r iiMivinruiai uf liac jgnrit: "v*jii ^nH> & iur jtuil i^
WiM iit lift aMft -vin^ Ijrmwk » ims' if iJi vrn^e iiniii'
K/Hm
Tie i^ f/ B^j
Am lit^ narkA heat atA la^& *d dM: E«aT«B]E« ««iuJ asd
lMir« im fiuk dinnaT to a Ileiil ma the djiifaaesi of wiudi
ir^ Itair^ Imm» vpeakiai^: bvtli mginate in the InJEmal WilL
Mi4 ootil tli« I>ffrD abbors luHueif a« die cause, he can
mcf^ fis^A iM^mMst vith the effects — his circcmstanceft. his
mtrnmuAmy;!^ IldPfire, or Hell-heat, is thus oiiIt an outer
my;u unA a see^mdarj word for Self-LoTe, eren as is darkness
for selfish siopiditj.
TUh himi of Hell^ like the heat of HeaTcn^ is derived
fr*fm iht; f>;rd as the Hun of the Universe. The Divine
Kfftiix is diMtiffisd to infernal heat in those who receive it,
jtisi as the rays of the Hun of Nature are transmuted bv
fiif^iUbsde into fwisfin^ and by a carcase into a stench. The
HELL FIRE. 495
Angel and the Devil alike owe their life to the Lord, bat the
one receives and utters Him in good-will and wisdom, and
the other in self-will and cunning.*
' When the Hells are opened to the Angels, there is seen
^ as it were a volume of fire and smoke like that which arises
^ from burning houses. Such fire exists in all in whom the
* Loves of Self and the World predominate.'t
Here Swedenborg interposes with the needful caution —
^ It is to be observed that the residents in Hell do not
^ burn in the fire which the Angels see : the fire is merely
^ an appearance from the Angels' point of sight. The
^ Devils themselves have no sense of burning, but expe-
^ rience a climate similar to what they were accustomed on
' Earth.' t
In this way our Author nullifies the common notion about
the pains of Hell, in so far as it is fancied that Devils are
kept in Hell as in a prison against their will. He freely
allows that Hell is a horrible place, but asserts that its
horrors are the pleasures of its inhabitants, and that their
chief aversion and severest punishment consist in the
approach and influence of the Angels —
' Whenever the heat of Heaven flows into Hell, the
^ Infcrnals shiver as with ague, and are inwardly tormented,
' for their life is thereby quenched, and they are plunged in
^ total darkness. Heavenly heat is never thus applied to
' Hell except in extreme cases, when it is necessary to quell
' outrageous riots.' §
Whilst the Selfish find their delight in gloom and filthy
they are miserable with all the misery of Selfishness —
^ Hell-fire besides standing as a synonym for Self-Love
^ is also used to describe the spite and anguish which are the
* fruits of Sclf-Love. The Selfish desire to injure all who do
^ not serve and worship them, and in proportion to their
» No. 56y. t No. 571. t No. 571. { No. 572.
496
HELL FIBE.
diBappointment is their rage for vengeance. Hence every
Infernal Spirit cherishes hatred against every other, and
afflicts his acquaintance nnmercifullj as far as he has
power.
^ When a Spirit arrived from Earth directs his course of
his own accord to his own Hell and enters, he is at first
received in a kindlj manner, and is led to believe, that he
is among friends : but this only lasts for a few hours during
which his comrades explore his cunning and measure his
strength ; which ascertained, thej begin to infest and tor*'
ment him, and then to reduce him to slavery by cruel
punishments. Nevertheless there arise for him chances
of emancipation ; for as every one in Hell desires to be
greatest, there are frequent insurrections in which those
who are in slavery are set free in order that they may
assist some new Devil to obtain dominion, who in turn
subjects those who resisted him to bondage. Such alterna-
tions go on perpetually in Hell ; and such rivalry and
tyranny are also designated HeU-fire.'*
With these facts in mind, how our Lord's words con-
cerning ' the worm which dieth not, and the fire which is
^ not quenched,' are illustrated and vivified !
Cfnashing of Teeth.
Swedenborg explains the gnashing of teeth in Hell as
^ the continual dispute and combat of falses conjoined with
^ contempt, enmity, mockery, ridicule and blasphemy.
^ Every one fights in favour of his own illusion and calls it
* Truth ; and when these disputes are heard out of tlie Hells^
^ they sound like gnashing of teeth ; and indeed are actually
' turned to gnashing of teeth whenever the light of Heaven
^ is permitted to break into the infernal regions.' f
• No*. 578-74.
t No. 576.
DEVILS AND SATANS. 497
There is no King Satan,
The reader will not have forgotten Swedenborg's asser-
tion, that there is no Angel in Heaven, nor any Devil in
Hell, who has not been bom on Earth, and in agreement
with this opinion he teaches, that there is no single Devil to
whom the Hells are subject —
' It has been hitherto supposed in the World, that there
is some one Devil who rules over the Hells, that he was
created an Angel of Light, and that he was cast down with
his crew into Hell because he rebelled against God ; and
this belief has become prevalent, because certain passages
of the Word which speak of the Devil and Satan, and also
of Lucifer, have been understood according to the sense
of the letter.
' The Devil and Satan however mean Hell considered
under different aspects. The Devil means the inmost Hell
inhabited by the very worst Spirits, called Evil Genii.
Satan denotes the outer Hell, the inhabitants of which
arc not so malignant, and are called Evil Spirits. Lucifer
denotes those who are of Babel or Babylon, and who pre-
tend to dominion even in Heaven.'*
We are therefore to regard the Devil and Satan as
equivalents for Hell, just as in politics we talk of France
and Turkey as though they were individuals, meaning all the
while the people of France and Turkey. Considering Hell
as a grand Monster, we should define the Devil as its Will
and Satan as its Understanding.
' Infemals are called Satans who have lived in Falses and
' consequent Evils, and Devils who have lived in Evils and
' consequent Falses. In heavenly light, Satans appear pale
^ and livid like corpses, and in some cases, black like mum-
' mies, and Devils of a fiery dusky complexion, and in some
* cases, intensely black like soot.'f
• No 541 t ^Vfra Ckrittiana Btligio,* No. 281.
2 R
498 HELL OOYEBMED BT HiSAYEN.
The Oavemment of JSdL
The Lord alone, and no Devil, is the king of Hell ; and
the name of God is denied and abhorred throughout the
infernal regions — ^for all in whom Self-Love rulea are
Atheists* however melodious may be th^ piety — jet over
every Devil the Divine Hand is stretched in government
and blessing, so that not the least effort is made by any
Fiend which the Lord does not turn to his eternal service.t
As we have already noted, the Lord governs the Hells
mediately by the Heavens. ^Hell is kept in order and
^ connection by oppositions against Heaven.'} Every Infernal
Society has an antagonist and is balanced by a Heavenly
Society; ^and in a more particular sense the Societies of
' Hell are ruled by Angels, who are appointed to inspect
^ them, to restrain the insanities and disturbances with which
^ they abound, and to prevent their members from torment-
^ ing each other beyond prescribed limits. § Sometimes also
^ Angels are sent to Hells to moderate these insanities and
^ disturbances by their presence.' || Of course such business
is assigned to Angels who have a taste for it.
^ Government in Hell is the opposite of government in
* Heaven, which is that of Mutual Love. Infernal govem-
* ment springs from Self-Love, for every one in Hell desires
^ to rule over others and to be greatest. Devils hate those
* who not favour them, and pursue them with vengeance
^ and cruelty ; and this results from the very nature of
* Self-Love.
^ The most malignant Spirits, who excel in cunning and
^ are able by the terror they inspire to enforce obedience, are
* * All who live in eyil interiorly deny a DiTine Being, how mach Boerer
' they may imagine while in externals, that they acknowledge Him.' Nob.
506, 562, et passim,
t • Arcana Codestia,' No, 2,706. t 'Apocalypsis JRevdata,' No. 62.
^ No. 391. g No. 543.
HELL RULED BT FEAR. 499
' set over their companions as Governors, by whom they are
* worshipped as gods. As every Devil has the same lust of
^ dominion in his heart, he bums with hatred against his
^ president-god, who in return regards his subjects as the
^ vilest slaves, although he is courteous towards them so long
' as they adore him ; for the Love of Self is like that which
' prevails among robbers, who show every sign of mutual
* affection whilst perpetrating their villanies, but arc after-
^ wards ready to murder one another for a larger share of
^ the booty. It is in consequence of the nature of this Lovey
^ that those who are given up to its lusts, appear in Hell at
^ a distance like wild beasts, some like foxes and leopards,
^ some like wolves and tigers, and some like crocodiles and
' venemous serpents, and that they dwell in stony and sandy
* deserts interspersed with marshes full of croaking frogs
* whilst over head dismal birds on the wing screech harshly.
^ These are the ochim, tziim and jiim mentioned in the pro-
* phccies of the Old Testament where the love of dominion
* from the Love of Self is spoken of.*
The whip is the sceptre of Hell —
^ In general all the inhabitants of Hell are ruled by fears.
' Some are ruled by fears contracted on Earth, but as these
^ lose their force by degrees, the dread of punishment is added,
^ and this dread is the chief means of deterring them from
^ mischief. The punishments of Hell are various, and are
^ gentle or severe according to the character of the lusts which
* require restraint.
^ It is worth repeating, that the fear of punishment is the
^ only means of restraining the violence and fury of the
* Infemals. There is no other. 'f
* No. 543, and ' Vera Chriitiana BeUgio,' No. 45. t Nos. 509 and 543.
2 K 2
500 so EDLE DETIUL
Hell is not a worid of mere idleness and rapine —
^ Its caTems are eternal workhouses. I hare been
^permitted to enter some of them in order that I might
^ describe them. AD who are there confined appeared like
*' beggars and none of them had anj memorj of their con*
^dition on Earth. The Angel who attended me pointed
^ oat one as a senrant, another as a soldier, another as a
' priest, another as a statesman, and another as a person of
^ great wealth ; jet none of them knew otherwise than that
^ thejr had alwars lived as comrades in their present servi-
^ tnde. The reason of this was, that although thej had
' differed in externals on Earth, they had all the while been
^ inwardly united bj a common character^ and death simply
* revealed the hidden reality/*
As in a well-contrived convict prison, every Devil is
compelled to earn his living. Writing of some who by the
doctrine of justification by faith alone had reduced them-
selves to an infernal state, he gives us this glimpse into the
economy of a Hell —
* WTien they arrive at their cavern in Hell from the
W^rld of Spirits, they enter, and the door is shut after
them. Then the governor of the cavern comes and says to
them, ^^ You cannot go out of this place any more : behold
^^ your companions ; they all work hard, and in proportion
" to their work they receive food from Heaven. I tell you
^^ this that you may not plead ignorance.^' Their com-
panions then also say to them, ^^ Our governor knows for
^^ what work every one is best fitted, and enjoins it daily,
^^ and on the day that we finish what he gives us to do, we
" reoave food ; but if we do not finish it we receive neither
^ food nor clothes ; and if any one does mischief to another.
Vera CkritHana BeUgio; Km. 281, 570 and 661
HEAVEN POISED A0AIN8T HELL. 501
" ho Ifl thrown into a comer of the cavern upon a bed
" of cursed dust, where he is miserably tormented, until the
" governor observes In him some sign of penitence, and
^^ then he is taken off, and ordered again to his work/'
The new comer is also informed that every one is at liberty
to walk, to converse, and afterwards to sleep, when he has
done his work. He is then led into an inner part of the
cavern where there are harlots, and he is permitted to
select one for himself, and call her his woman ; but he is
forbidden under severe penalties to indulge in promiscuous
connections.'*
It would be easy to amplify these notes on infernal life
from Swedenborg's manifold experience, but the reader
has probably had enough.
The Equilibrium between Heaven and Hell.
Among Swedenborg's assertions there is, perhaps, none
more startling than that which affirms an equilibrium
between Heaven and Hell, so that every Society in the one
has an antagonist in the other..
' All the Societies of Heaven are arranged most distinctly
^ according to the genera and species of Goods, and all the
^ Societies of Hell according to the genera and species of
* Evils, and beneath every Society of Heaven there is a
* corresponding Society of Hell, which is its opposite ; and
^ from their opposition results equilibrium.
' The equilibrium between the Heavens and the Hells is
' affected by the number of Spirits who enter them, which
^ amounts to many thousands a day ; but to know and
^ perceive in which way the balance inclines, and to regulate
^ and equalize It with perfect exactness, is not in the power
* of any Angel, but of the Lord alone. The Divine, which
^ proceeds from the Lord, is omnipresent, and observes in
• 'Apoeaiypm Bevd(aa* No. IM.
^ ercrrj iirtctkfiL, if diere be tlie ^^test prcpoiidermDoe, and
^ redrewes it : whereas an Angel oolr knows what is near
^ bim^ and has no perception in himself of what is psiuift"
^ ercai in hu own Sodety/*
To the Eqoilibrimn thus maintained, be ascribes the
Free-WiU of mankind—
^ Between Heaven and Hell is a great interstice, and in
^ this interstice is the World of Spirits, into which a most
^ copious exhalation of Eril arises oat of Hdl, and as copioios
^ an inflox of Good descends frcnn Heaven* Every Man as to
^ his Hpirit is in the midst of this interstice, and between the
^ pUy of the equal forces enjoys freedom of determination.
^ Unless 3Ian were between both, he would have no
^ power of thought, nor any will, and still less any freedom
^ and choice ; for all these flow from the Equilibrium of
* Good and Evil/f
Whether or not this exquisite balance between Heaven
and Ilell is preserved in the Universe, we do not know :
Hwedenborg says it is, and the statement is not incredible :
but if true of the Universal Mind we are certain it is not of
the IndividuaL If we are to consider Difiusive Love as
Heaven and Absorbent Love as Hell, we need take no pains
to prove, that in countless cases there is no approach to
ei|uil!brium kept up between the heavenly and the infernal
propensities: yea we might ask, if freedom be the result of
a poise between the Love of Others and Self-Love, who is
free V I'herc may bo some method of reconciling what
Hwedenborg has to say on this head with common ex-
perience, but it would appear as if in this matter he was
exercising his fancy far out of sight of reality. He has
another theory by which he accounts for our sense of free-
dom^ self-hood, and personality, namely, that the Divine
• Nss. 608 sod 694.
t Mos. 646 sad 699, and ' Vv^a Ohrktiana ReUgio,' Nos. 475 and 497.
DEVILS THEMSELVES SEEK HELL. 503
Life whereby Angel and Man and Devil exist, bears into all
its recipients that feeling of independence, which in God is
a reality, but in His Creatures an illusion, and which illusion
Ho corrects by revelation. That theory is, to my mind, the
finest interpretation ever offered of the mystery of conscious-
ness, but the second explanation — ^tho Equilibrium between
Heaven and Hell — seems to derive no sanction from ex-
perience or revelation.
The Lard c<ut8 no one into Hell^ hut Evil Spirits cast
themselves in.
The wide distinction between damnation according to
popular beliefs and according to Swedenborg must have
been noted. Both agree that Hell is a land of night, of fire,
and of horror, but whilst it is commonly imagined that the
Evil are cast into Hell against their will, Swedenborg asserts
that they abide there with their will — yea desire nothing
more earnestly* — and that the sharpest pains of the Wicked
result when they venture out of Hell, or come in contact
with Heaven. Such being the case he writes —
* Some persons have believed very confidently, that God
^ turns away His face from Man, rejects him, and casts him
^ into Hell, and that He is angry with him on account of
^his evils; and others go still further, and afiirm that God
^ punishes Man, and brings evil upon him. They also con-
' firm this opinion from the Literal Sense of the Word, in
^ which expressions occur which appear to sustain it ; for
* they are not aware that the Spiritual Sense of the Word,
^ which explains the Literal Sense, is entirely different, and
^ that hence the genuine doctrine of the Church, which is
* derived from the Spiritual Sense of the Word, teaches
^ otherwise. True doctrine declares, that the Lord never
• No. 547.
5M mxuL
Hii fine frn MaBr nrvcr r^yects
wbMe MiBti » n a staee of ghatratiatty^ [£«-.
I in die L%faE <9f HcaT«: "^pcmsro dib
tlie W<Mrd. Iwcaaae G^ » k»re kaciC. giimhwiw kscH
ilKif : go^imtsm iticif caniKSt ^ cril to aajoae, mar
lore and tier cast Man oat ; it w mntiJii to Am
tmuanet^ aad thereSar^ cotitrarj to tbe Dmae Xatare.'*
The EtH cast dfeemselrcs into HelU and in HeO ^ die j
are fererelj ponidbed in order tliat Aej mar be deterred
from dob^ erO^^ and A> i^ppeoraotee tlie jndgemmt azid dlie
ppiiiilipieiit are of tbe Lord*s infiiction : bvt die tnitk k*
His relatioo to tlie erfl d0Mr is like tbat of a kin^^ or a
judge, or the law, none oi wUch is tbe canse of punisli-
meat, because none of them con^eQed tbe criminal to do
wrong/ f
Tbos does Swedenborg sedL to dispose of tbe terrible
questions friucb spring oat of the creed of ererlasting per-
didon« His solation is plaoaUe^ and may yield temporary
satisfaction to some, bat the core of tbe difficulty — tbe
responsibility of tbe Creator for Hell — ^wbicb underlies all
these apologies — is antoacbed. Neither Swedenborg nor
bis generation was afflicted with tbe bencTolent concern for
Ilevils which we experience, and hence probably bis super-
ficial treatment of the case. Nevertheless, I believe, tbat in
his doctrine of Hell or Self-Love lies hid the just vindication
of the Divine Love in the existence of Evil : but of this we
shall be better qualified to speak when we have discussed
bis treatise on the Divine Providence, published six years
after tbe present on Heaven and Hell.
Some will ask, Who can yield credence to these other-
world experiences? To answering the question, Swedenborg:
• Ilo. 545. t Noe. 548-550.
WUO WILL BELIEVE. 505
devotes his last paragraph; and here it is for the serious
consideration of inquirers : —
^\Vliat is said in this work concerning Heaven, the
^ World of Spirits, and Hell will appear obscure to those
^ who have no delight in the knowledge of Spiritual Truths,
^ but clear to those who have delight, and especially to
^ those, who are in the affection of Truth for its own sake, —
^ that is, who love Truth because it is Truth ; for whatever
^ is loved enters with light into the ideas of the Mind, and
^ this is eminently the case when that which is loved is
^ Truth, because all Truth is in light/*
• No. 603.
( 606 )
CHAPTER VIII.
THE PLANETS AND THEIR PEOPLE.*
^ Bt the Divine mercy of the Lord/ writes Swedenborg,
< things interior are open to me, so that I can converse with
* Spirits and Angek ; and inasmuch as I desired to know
* whether Worlds like our own existed, what sort of places
* ihej were, and bj what manner of people inhabited, the
* Lord allowed me to enter into intercourse with the Spirits
^ and Angels of other Earths, with some for a day, with some
< for a week, and with some for months, so that mj curiosity
* might be satisfied.
^ It is to be observed, that all Spirits and Angels are
^ from the Human Race and abide near the Earths on which
* they were bred: whoever therefore has his interiors opened
* by the Lord may converse with them as man with man,
* and be informed concerning the lands from which they
* come. Such has been my daily privilege for twelve years
*pa8t.'t (1758).
Ere going further, it will be well to note three points.
First, that Swedenborg did not profess to visit the Planets
themselves : they are in Nature, and to see them with his
fleshly eyes, he must have been transferred to them bodily.
Second, that his information was obtained from the Spirits
* * De Telluribut in Mundo nostra Solari, qumvocantur PlaneUz: etde
' TeUuribw in Ccdo Attrifero : deque iUarum IncoUs ; turn de SpiriUbue ei
' Angeiii ibi; ex Audiiie et Vieis. Londini : 1758.' 4to. 72 pages: a reprint
of some chapters in the * Arcana Oodeslia.*
t No. 1.
MEBCUBIANS. 507
of the several Earths whom he encoontered in the Spiritual
World. Third, that as these Spirits were in connection with
the Planets whereon thej were bred, he was sometimes
favoured to see through their eyes the scenery from which
they had ascended, even as we have read, that Swedenborg
himself sometimes lent his eyes to Spirits, that they might
enjoy a peep into our world.*
Of the habitability of the Planets, Swedenborg enter-
tained no doubt, considering that orbs so like our own
must have been created for similar uses, and urging the
peculiar and characteristic reason, that for the nutrition of
the Grand Man of Heaven a far larger field is requisite
than our speck of earth can supply —
*• The Angelic Heaven is so immense that it corresponds
*' to every particular in Man, exterior and interior, myriads of
^ Angels going to the formation of every member, organ and
^ viscus, and to the affections of each ; and it was given me
*' to know, that this Heaven cannot by any means exist
* except by drafts from innumerable Earths.'t
The first world to which we are introduced is —
Mercury.
The people of Mercury correspond to the memory of
things abstracted from their material conditions.
^Vhen they met Swedenborg, they instantly explored
his memory in search of all he knew. For the cities and
lands he had visited they cared nothing, but simply for
what was done therein, for the laws, customs and characters
of the inhabitants. What facts of this description they
found in him to please them, they picked out and classified
with amazing quickness and skill. When writing his
' Arcana Caelestiaj they told him, that what he set forth was
very superficial and common-place. He replied, that his
* i$ce page 395 of the present Toliune. t New. 5 tAA 9.
608 BOVEBS AFFBB KVOWLEDGE.
readers found it bo subtle and elevated, that ther^ was mnch
which thej could not comprehend. They then wondered
how such could ever become Angels, when they were told,
that these dull ones, if they only lived in fiuih and charity,
entered a higher Heaven than theirs.
Their thirst for information and their feidlity in its acqui-
sition are almost incredible. They explqre everybody they
meet to discover what he knows. A certain Spirit, who
affected great elegance in his discourse encountered some
Mercurians, but his eloquence was lost on them. They
merely listened to ascertain if he had anything to say, which
they had not known before; all else they disregarded as
trash.
In consequence of dieir immense knowledge they are
excessively haughty : they imagine they know so much, that
it is impossible to know more. About this pride, they were
reproved : they were told, that although they might know a
great deal, it was as nothing compared to that which they did
not know. '^ True," they replied ; ^^ but we are not haughty;
" we only glory in our grasp of memory." They were
answered, that knowledge is only valuable for its use; to
which they rejoined, " Our delight is in knowledges, and to
" us knowledges are uses."
The Spirits of Mercury never remain long in one place,
but roam through the Universe in companies in quest of
intelligence. They do not devise their routes, but arc
conducted as by instinct, under the Divine auspices, to wherc-
ever they may acquire information in orderly developemcnt
of that which they already possess. They thus experience a
constant growth in science, but not in wisdom. They are
not distinguished for judgement ; they draw no conclusions
from tlieir learning ; they are simply satisfied with knowing.
With the Spirits of our Earth, those of Mercury cannot
abide on account of their grossness. Our concern is for
external information; theirs for internal. They have a
MERCURIANS. &09
common saying, that thej care nothing for a aheath, but for
that which a sheath holds.
On Mercury there is no printing-press. Some of its
Spirits sent Swedenborg a long printed paper made up of
pieces awkwardly stuck together and sneeringly insinuated,
that the knowledge of his race was on such paper and not
in their minds. They were however instructed in the true
state of the case, and they subsequently sent him a neatly
printed document, saying, they knew that on his Earth there
was such paper and books made out of it.
^ I was anxious to know what kind of face and body the
* people of Mercury have. Instantly there appeared before
* my eyes the figure of one of their women. Her face was
*' beautiful, but smaller than that of a woman of our Earth :
' she was more slender, but of equal height : she wore a linen
^ head dress, not artfully but gracefully disposed. A man
^ was also presented. He too was also more slender than the
^ men of our Earth : he wore a garment of deep blue, fitted
' tightly to his body, without folds or frills.
' There was then shown me a species of their oxen. They
' did not differ much from ours, except that they were
' smaller and in some respects like deer.'*
From Mercury, he was told, the Sun looks large — ^larger
than from any other Earth. The climate is temperate. ^ Heat
^ does not arise from the Sun's nearness, but from the depth
' and density of a Planet's atmosphere, as appears from the
^ cold on high mountains in the torrid zone : heat is also
^ varied according to the direct or oblique incidence of the
^ Sun's rays, as is manifest from summer and winter in
' every region.' t
Venus.
In Venus are two kinds of men ; one mild and humane,
• No. 44. t No. 45.
f 10 TKVCi AJTD
tfbe Mker isntps m4 flkMsr WvtiL Sone of the Spiritt
ht»m tke msM p^rt lakL tfcat tbej adbMvfedged o«r Ixivd
/<MM r;briit M ri<>d. Mi adiM tfcat am Tcbu Aer lud
Tbe HfiritB €4 Venu ia the Graad Has eofrapond to
lk^ mem^ftj €4 Aioip materttl agfecxn^ widh die mcimiij of
Mnfp^ hmnMUmlf to wUdi latter Ae Spirits of Xerciirj
correnpoDd* The Hpirita of Mcrany and Yemis are therefore
fntfniatel J related aa tword and icabbard.
With the nayage Hpirita, Hwedenborg did not speak ;
but Angels mtormed bim, that dier delight in rapine, and
eapeciallj in eating their spoiL Their delight in eating
was a^mmanicated to him and ^ perceived to be exceedingly
^ great/ They are for the most part giants ; the men of our
Kardi would scarcely reach to their middles. Thej are
stapid; thej make no inqnirj into heavenly things; all
their thoughts are absorbed in cares about land and cattle.
Afler death thej are dreadfully infested with evils and
false persuasions, and such as can be saved undergo severe
trials —
^ I hare seen some after they had passed through ex-
^ treme suffering taken up into Heaven, and when they were
^ reeisived there I was made sensible of such a tenderness of
'Joy proceeding from them, that tears were drawn from
* mine eyes/^
Mars.
Tlie best Hpirits which rise from our solar system are
those of Mars. They are of a celestial temper not unlike
that of tlie Mont Ancient Church on our own Earth. In
the (irarid Man they correspond to a principle mediate
iNiiween tlie Will and the Understanding.
IMie people of Mars have no formal governments, but
s
• No. 110.
MARS. 511
live in societies of friends, as do Angels in the Heavens,
with whom some of them have open intercourse. They are
very careful to expel from their communities any who begin
to think perversely and thereby incline to evil ; and such
exiles lead a most wretched life, solitary in dens and other
places. By this timely severity, the perfect order and peace
of mutual love is preserved, and the encroachments averted
of the lusts for power and property — the lusts whereby
Adam lost Eden and exchanged the ties of brotherhood for
the rod of empire.
As was the case in the Adamic Church, language in
Mars is almost tacit, being effected by what is called ^ in->
^ temal respiration,' and supplemented by lively facial action.
By these means thought is expressed with a friUness and
delicacy altogether impossible with our noisy and cumbrous
speech. Affectation and deceit are unknown; none can
dissimulate, or utter more or less than he really thinks.
The people of Mars worship our Lord, saying. He is
God alone, and that every good thing is from Him ; that
He leads and directs them ; and that He often appears
amongst them. Of themselves, they say, they are Devils,
and that solely by the Divine attraction are they held in
Heaven and withheld from Hell.
An appearance of an inhabitant of Mars was presented.
His face was like that of a man of our Earth. He had no
beard, but instead a blackness where the beard grows. The
upper part of his face was sallow.
The food of the people of Mars consists of fruit and pulse,
and chiefly of a round fruit which buds out of the ground.
Their garments are made from the fibrous bark of trees,
woven and stiffened with gum. It is said, they have an art
of making fluid fires, wherewith they lighten their nights.
Jupiter.
With Spirits from Jupiter, Swedenborg had more
512 HABITS IN JUPITSIL
familiar acquaintance than with any others. They
ported, that their Earth was as densely peopled as it
could be, and that it was fruitful exceedingly. The in-
habitants have no desires beyond the necessaries of life,
and hence their numbers. They are distinguished into
nations, tribes, and houses ; all of one kindred dwell aparty
and intercourse is confined to relatives. Among them is
no covetousness or violence. When told of the wan|
murders and thefts on our Earth, the Spirits turned away
in horror.
Swedenborg could discern the presence of the Spirits of
Jupiter by the inexpressible sweetness and gentleness of
their sphere —
^ The tranquillity and delight with which they inspired
^ me sensibly filled my breast and heart ; at the same time
^ there was a removal of cupidities and anxieties about thie
^ future, which cause disquiet and excitement.'*
^ It was shown me what kind of faces the inhabitants of
^ Jupiter have ; not that I saw the inhabitants ikemsdvea^ but
^ Spirits with faces similar to those they had when they dwelt
* on Jupiter. Two faces were presented. They were like
^ the faces of the Men of our own Earth, fair and beautiful ;
' Binccrity and modesty shone forth from them.'t
Great care is bestowed on the face in Jupiter ; it is
washed frequently and is kept shaded from the sun. The
face, they say, is of the first importance, for it is the mirror
of the mind ; and with them it is the chief instrument of
conversation. By their eyes and lips they communicate
their thoughts and feelings, and devoid of deceit, they allow
every fibre to have free play. Vocal discourse is also used
in Jupiter, but it is not so loud as with us.
Thus conversed the people of the Adamic or Golden
Ago in this world. Every one may perceive that the
• No. 61. t No. 52.
DEPORTMENT IN JUPITER. 513
earliest people could not have many words, for language
is a slow growth of time. Besides discourse by the coun-
tenance far excels talk, even as seeing docs hearing and a
landscape its description.
There are large horses which roam wild in Jupiter.
The inhabitants are afraid of them, but they do no harm.
Through Swedenborg's eyes, some Spirits of Jupiter
were permitted to see faces on our Earth. They pro-
nounced them not handsome, and any comeliness they had,
skin deep and not reaching the fibres which display pro-
found emotion. They were surprised to see faces studded
with pimples and deformed, saying, that such were unknown
amongst them. Nevertheless some countenances, which
were smiling and peaceful and slightly full about the lips,
gave them satisfaction.
In Jupiter they do not walk erect as we do, nor creep on
fours, but as they move along assist themselves with their
hands, and alternately half elevate themselves on their feet,
and at every third step turn the face sideways and back-
wards, bending the body a little suddenly : a motion almost
like that seen in some swimmers, who as they help themselves
with their hands, turn their heads round.
It is thought indecent by them to be seen in any other
way than with the face in front. In walking they keep the
face elevated; to look downwards they consider vile and
abject; the humblest amongst them moves about with an
upward gaze ; and any who acquire a contrary habit, are
expelled from society.
They delight in long meals, not for the sake of eating,
but for conversation. They do not dress their food to
please the palate, but simply to make it wholesome, finding
in the end, that what is wholesome is savoury. They sit
cross-legged at table on fig leaves spread on the ground;
and are always cautious to keep their faces in front, and
not to be seen from behind.
2 L
-iA»^ *iiai.;3> %*r ■z:2sr'-i:an-
'tlF^ IMt "WrXtL 'tUeC 'WUBt II' "tBH:
' dimsitiL Iff iiif' iMsxi. mc I lafwoE- knrw mdbv
iSunrt: 7iju;5i4> jtihl hot Jidra/k. itcnu; <c z^aear niMr
uiC -=11^ 3iitfMidztcMv. «iiiiiiuBiiafi£ Sfusnup
awm^ifc ^l' i^a^ Sbu^an. ton imlr zi. T^tt uaurriwDSL IKlxk
tiitr ri^^cnifr i<f ucr ZjmsL. laiitw: uf Jioiiaer art sec -vilEz^ i^
mtvj^sacjr. HUTxiig^ T^t^rr art ccxmimr- crmck «t -mwAj;^ jq^
lutK'/v xKntlnn^, Swcie ??|iijit# «f <^iir Earch bottiKid c<f ^mv
iMMv/xorr* of tiMsr sci^iumitjaMir wh3b Laiis. Gr««]c. aad
U:*U that tLere va* do Wud<m in aoj qiiandrr of ^ucli
•UiC Tk« Kpirita from JnpiUr koweTcr went Airdier and
4^mUiittni^ jmcfa Science as ckwds over true Intelligence :
mid in ijo <ar tbcr were in error: bat they were shewn,
thill whilift verifsd knowledge is indeed worthlesft. Wisdom
Ai^ivi'H from Sci^^ice means and material for use and
TUt: Auffi^n from Japiter correspond in the Grand
Muri Uf Ima^tiatire Thoaght, whilst the Angels from our
f^rth riiu; no higher thiui functions in the external parts
iff hfn JJody : hence it i» easy to see how Spirits from
« N<». 57.
HOUftES AND WORSHIP IN JUPITER. 515
the two Worlds can have little satisfaction in each other^s
company.
The houses in Jupiter are low and of wood, coated with
bark of a pale blue colour : the walls and ceilings are
decorated with little stars. They are fond of picturing the
sky on the insides of their houses, believing the stars to bo
the abodes of the Angels. They have also tents decorated
in the same manner : to them they retire in the heat of the
day, and in them take their meals. In the construction of
their dwellings and in their domestic economy, they are
scrupulously nice.
They worship the Lord, calling Him the Only Lord.
The Spirits were asked whether they knew that the Lord is
a Man. They answered, that they all know He is a Man,
because in Jupiter He has been seen by many as a Man :
that He instructs them, preserves them, and is eternal life to
those who serve Him in being good. They said further, that
He reveals what they ought to believe and how they ought
to live, and what is thus revealed is handed down from
generation to generation ; but they fancy that this revela-
tion is innate — is written in their minds, for whenever they
hear these revealed truths, they instantly recognize and
acknowledge them.
They do not know that the Lord was bom on our Earth :
they said it was no concern of theirs ; it was enough to
know, that He is Man and Lord of the Universe. When
told, that on our Earth He is named Christ Jesus, and
that Christ signifies Anointed or King, and Jesus, Saviour,
they replied, that they do not worship the Lord as King,
for King suggests an idea of outer force, but as Saviour.
They set no times apart as holidays, but every morning
at sunrise, and every evening at sunset, worship the Lord
and sings psalms in their tents.
They are very cautious, that no one should fall into
erroneous religious opinions. Those who do err are first
2 L 2
516 JUFTTEB AITD fiATCKX.
admoniBbed^ tben tiireatened; mnd, if tber persist^
Boffocated Lt duLStising Spirits. Thus the worship of the
Lord IB preaerred in puritr in Jnpiter.
XeTertheless there are som# who live in error and
wickedness. These set up as saints and mediators betweea
the Lord and their fellows — a repetition of oor Papal ajrstem
— and adore the son, calling it the Lord's fMie. The good
inhalntants hold them in aversion and have no interoonrae
with them.
The average duration of hmnan life in Jupiter is thirt j
of our years. It is of the Lord's Providence that life
diould be so brief^ for otherwise the people would grow
more numerous than the earth could support. The people
arrive earlv at maturity and marry young ; and their prime
delight is found in their conjugal and parental relationships.
Death has for them no terror, inasmuch as continued exist*
ence in Heaven is their most familiar prospect They do
not die of disease, but tranquilly as in sleep. Of the approach
of death, they have fair warning in the appearance of a bald
head. At the nght of this vision, they know their decease is
certain within a year, and at once prepare for the diangc.
^ I was allowed to see how the Spirits of Jupiter, when
^ ready, are taken up into Heaven and become Angels. On
^ such occasions, there appear chariots and bright horses as of
^ fire, by which they are carried away like Elijah. In Heaven,
^ they appear clothed in shining raiment of blue, spotted
*with little stars of gold.'*
Saturn.
llie Spirits of Saturn are upright and modest, and
inasmuch as they esteem themselves little, they appear little.
In the Grand Man, they correspond to a middle sense between
the Spiritual and Natural Man.
• Xw. S2 and 83.
SATURN AND THE BIOON. 517
In worship, the people of Saturn are profoundly humble,
feeling themselves as nothing. They acknowledge our Lord
as the only God ; and sometimes He appears to them in an
Angelic Form. WTien they come to a certain age, they begin
to converse with Spirits, who instruct them concerning the
Lord, how He is to be worshipped, and how they ought
to live.
They dwell in families, every family by itself; each
family consisting of a man and wife and children. When
the children marry they leave their parents' house and think
no more about it : wherefore the Spirits of Saturn appear
two and two.
They bestow very little thought on food and raiment :
they subsist on the fruit and pulse their earth yields, and
protect themselves from the cold with a coarse skin or coat.
Knowing that their real life commences at death, they caro
nothing for their bodies, except so far as they subserve the
ends of eternal existence. Hence they do not bury their
dead, but cast them forth and cover them with branches of
forest trees.
Being questioned about the great belt which encircles
their Earth, they said, it does not appear to them as a belt,
but as something whitish like snow strewed in the sky.
Some call their nocturnal light, which is great, the Lord,
but these are not tolerated. The nocturnal light is from the
belt and the moons.
The Moon.
The Spirits from the Moon are dwarfs like children of
seven years old, but more robust. Their faces are not
unhandsome, but longer than ordinary, lliey do not
speak from the lungs, but from air in the abdomen, and
with a noise like thunder. This peculiarity results from
the nature of the Moon's atmosphere.
* i was informed, that the Spirits of the Moon in the
518 THE HOON INHABITED.
^ Grand Man have relation to the ensiform cartilage or
^ xiphaidesy to which the ribs in front are attached, and from
^ which descends the fascia cdba^ which is the fulcrum of the
^ abdominal muscles.'*
It is commonly believed that the Moon, by reason of
the absence of air and water, is uninhabited — at any rate on
the hemisphere which is subject to our gaze. Swedenborg
meets the aerial objection, but has nothing to say as to the
aqueous ; and in this very summary manner would settle
all scepticism —
' It is well known to Spirits and Angels, that there are
^ inhabitants in the Moon, and in the Moons which revolve
^ about Jupiter and Saturn. Even those who have not seen
^ and conversed with any Lunar Spirits, entertain no doubt
^ that the Moons are inhabited, for they too are Earths, and
^ where there is an Earth, there is Man — ^Man being the
' end for which every Earth exists, and without an end
' nothing was made by the Great Creator. Every one who
^ thinks from reason, in any degree enlightened, must see,
' that the Human llace, from which the Heavens exist, is
' the final cause of Creation.' f
In the main, this argument may be sound, but since we
have immense deserts in Asia and Africa and vast un-
peopled paradises in South America, Why should it
surprise us if there be here and there a vacant Moon or
Planet in the Universe ? Our own Earth existed for
myriads of ages in preparation for Man; Why not then
other Earths ?
In noticing the ^ De Cultu et Amove Deij^ published in
1745, occasion was taken to repudiate the foolish story, that
Swedenborg had, long before Herschel, announced the
existence of a seventh Planet ; and if proof were wanting
that he was as ignorant as his contemporaries of Uranus
* No. 111. t No. 112.
URANUS AND NEPTUNE UNKNOWN. 519
and Neptune and the scores pf little Earths which revolve
between Mars and Jupiter, it would be supplied in the
present treatise wherein there is not the slightest hint of
any world outside Saturn. Probably some will convert
this ignorance into a weapon of offence against Swedenborg,
saying, How can we trust him where we cannot test him,
when we find him ignorant where we might test him?
when it would have been so easy to have given us
incontrovertible evidence of his powers by anticipating
Herschcl, Adams and Lcverrier ? It is neither my inclina-
tion nor vocation to parry such thrusts, but 1 would simply
observe, that his ignorance on this and similar scores
might be inferred from the conditions of his seership as
stated by himself. When pressed by the Queen of Sweden
as to the persons with whom he could converse in the
Spiritual World, he answered, that he could discover only
those of whom he could farm same idea^ whether from
personal acquaintance on Earth or from history or repute.*
The same must have been true of the Spirits of the Planets.
He could only search for what he knew existed. Some clue
of fact, however slight, was requisite to establish rapport^
even as a mesmerized clairvoyant demands a letter or
a lock of hair as a starting point of exploration. Inasmuch
as Swedenborg knew nothing naturally of Uranus or
Neptune, How could he ask for their Spirits in the
Spiritual World? He might indeed have struck upon
them by reason of some chance affinity, but even in that
case it would have been difficult, if not impossible, for them
to have indicated to his apprehension their place in Creation.
No quest indeed can be more hopeless, than for physical
information in the spiritual sphere.
* Tlio convenuitioii is rcUtvd hv Goooral Tuxcu.
J9V 9BjL
lack S3t 17aS*. Effk BcbokCb iMjpjiiinaii t* S
biiff^.tkK HdS H^ht Wiiiie Siai; t* wibiA he mplii J^ -h
iMBCBt tM W£fc§ 4^ tilt ItaoQMiL Hie nearer ikr
the iaer are sbe E^aa^msi^ la tW Saa itself
Sanmes* u pr^fiobS j iscJu ckat tkeir parade* are
ier^M id ocA^M^^dMi aad pat ^ tke aaaie id Hatter.
It wimAA tkerdT^re «e<sa likelv. tkas the San — i
sphere — ^v^Mild be the finest Bein^ — a GioJ. aa
a something, which, a* it is aot aiateriaL aiast be ^K»t
enujieBt. For these reaaons I iadine to betiere^ that God
has Hi§ seat in the Son. a* the Bible savs.'*
Of the Son in the present treatise he tells nodiing« not
eren vhether it is inhabited, bot probably he deemed the
infiormation soperflooos^ unless indeed ve might coneeiTe
of a race of men with the constitutions of salamanders. In
otber writini^s he frequently asserts, * that the Sun is pure
^ fire/t but without explaining what he means bj pure fire,
except in one place where he states. * the Sun consists of
^ created i^ub^tances whose activity produces fire.*! ^ these
assertions there is slight, if any. advance on the speculation
of 1719 save in the doctrine, that the Sun's radiance, in
coinifjon with the Stars^ is fed by perpetual influx firom the
Spiritual Sun — the Sun of the Heavens, the effluence and
the glory of the Infinite Majesty.
Having disposed of our Solar System, he brings us to a
chapter, the most important in his book, headed —
* From Letter citad in tlie present Tolnme, pp. 61, 62.
t See for inftsnces ' Vera CkrMama Bdigio; Nos. 35 and 41 ; * De Dirino
' Amore H de Dwima SapienHa,' Ko9. 89 and 157 ; and * Z>e Antort Qm-
jMgkOl; Kee. 182 and 532.
I ' Vtra CkruUana Heliffh,' No. 172.
WHY OUR EARTH WAB CHOSEN. 521
* The Reasons why the Lord was pleased to be horn on our
* Earth J and not on another,
* There are several reasons, concerning which I have
had information from Heaven, why it pleased the Lord to
be born and assume Humanity on our Earth and not on
another. The chief reason was on account of the Word,
that it might be written on our Earth ; and when written
be published afterwards throughout the whole Earth ; and
when once published be preserved to all posterity; and
that thus it might be made manifest, that God was made
Man, even to all in the other life.
I. — ' On Account of the Word. — The Word is Divine
Truth itself, which teaches that there is a God, a Heaven
and a Hell, a life after death, and how a Man ought to
believe and live, so that he may obtain Heaven and eternal
felicity. Without revelation, so without the Word, all
this would be entirelv unknown on our Earth.
11. — ' That the Word might be written on our Earth. — The
art of writing has existed here from the earliest times,
first on the bark of trees, next on skins, afterwards on
paper, and lastly by printing. This was provided by the
Lord for the sake of the Word.
in. — ' 2' hat the Word might afterwards be published
throughout the whole Earth. — Here, there is commerce
among all nations by land and water, and the Word once
written amongst us may be conveyed and taught every-
where.
IV. — ' That the Word once written might be preserved to
all j^osteritgj for thousands and thousands of years. — That it
has been so preserved is well known.
V. — ' That thus it might be made manifest that God had
become Man. — It was with a view to this end that the
Word was revealed, since no one can believe in a God
' and love a God, whom he cannot comprehend under some
' appearance : wherefore they who resolve God into an in»
522 OUR EARTH 18 THE UTTERMOST.
visible and incomprehensible principle sink their thought
into Nature and believe in no God. Hence it pleased the
Lord to be born on this Earth, and to make the fact
manifest by the Word, that it might not only be known
on this globe, but to Spirits and Angels from other
Earths.
' In every other Earth in the Universe, Divine Truth
is communicated orally by Spirits and Angels, and in-
asmuch as in most Earths the inhabitants live isolated
in families, the Truth thus revealed is but slightly diffused,
and, unless constantly renewed, is either perverted or
perishes. With us, it is quite otherwise ; the Word in
its integrity is secure for ever.
' It is to be observed, that the Lord receives all from
whatever Earth, who acknowledge and worship Grod under
a Human Form — God under a Human Form being the
Lord : and as the Lord appears to the people of the
several Earths as an Angel, when they learn in the
Spiritual World from the Spirits of our Earth, that God
is actually Man, they receive that Word with joy.
' To these reasons may be added, that in the Grand
ilan, the people of our Earth correspond to the uttermost
senses. Hence the Divine Truth in the Letter of our
Scriptures was reduced to the lowest expressions, and the
Lord by His incarnation in Mary, from the First became
likewise the Last This however is an argument,
which will be intelligible to a very few/*
In looking over these reasons, it is to be carefully
borne in mind, that in Swedenborg's eye, the peoples
of the whole Universe of Earths are one people — one Grand
Man ; that he held, that the relations of the people of any
one Earth to the peoples of all other Earths are as intimate
as IS any part of a man's body to the other parts. The
* No8. 113 to 122.
FIVE UNKNOWN WORLDS. 523
solidarity of Universal Humanity is constantly assumed by
Swedenborg, and his reader need never expect to under-
stand him until he concedes that premiss.
In this view of Universal Humanity, our fimction is
defined as that of the skin. In us, the forces of spiritual
life reach their circumference and find fixity and fulcrum.
The Divine Wisdom, which in more interior regions is in
constant flux and renewal, is with us set fast in the story of
Israel and Jesus Christ ; and moreover, what is thus done
for us and with us, is done for the Universe, since all worlds
are included in us as is the whole body in the skin. We
are mean, but in our very meanness is our importance.
In conclusion, Swedenborg treats us to a description of
Five Earths beyond our Solar System in the Starry
Heavens.
The Fibst Earth.
The people worship an Angel who appears to them for
the Lord. They said they knew, that the Most High God
is the Sun of Heaven, but that He is too great for them to
adore Him, and that He appears to their Angel but not to
them.
' The Angel they worship is an Angelic Society, to
* which it is granted by the Lord to preside over them, and
* to instruct them in what is just and right. Their light is
' fiery and yellow like that from a torch flame — a conse-
* quence of their not adoring the Lord immediately
' In other respects they are modest, rather simple, but still
' right thinking.'*
In some degree their Earth was seen, and there appeared
green fields and trees in foliage, also fleecy sheep. Some of
the lower orders came into view, who were clothed very like
• No8. 130 and VM
524 AN EARTH RELATED TO THE SPLEEN.
the peasantry of Europe : likewise a man and his wife, she
tall and graceful, he with a stately carriage and a look of
haughtiness. The Angels said, that such were the manners
on that Earth, and that whilst the women were humble they
loved the men, who in spite of their lofty bearing, were well
disposed.
^ I was informed, that the People and Spirits of that
^ Earth have relation to something in the Spleen of the
^ Grand Man ; in which information I was confirmed by an
* influx into the Spleen whilst they conversed with me.'*
With the Spirits of that Earth, he compared notes as to
the differences between us and them, * and especially con-
cerning the Sciences cultivated exclusively on our Earth,
such as Astronomy, Geometry, Mechanics, Physics, Che-
mistry, Medicine, Optics, and Natural Philosophy, and
Arts unknown elsewhere, as Ship-Building and Metal-
lurgy, and Writing and Printing whereby we communicate
with one another at a distance, preserve thought for
thousands of years, and hold the revelation of the Word in
permanence.' t
Lastly, he was permitted to see the Hell of that Earth,
and very terrible was the appearance of the Devils therein,
a
insomuch that I dare not describe their hideous faces.
There were also seen female magicians, who practise dire-
ful arts : they appeared clad in green, and struck me with
horror.'t
A Second Earth.
The Angels of this Earth have relation to vision in the
Grand Man and are remarkably keen-sighted.
' In conversing with them, I compared them to eagles,
^ which fligh high and scan all below ; but they were offended
^ with the comparison, fancying that I likened them to eagles
» No. 132. t No. 136. t No. 137.
AN IMAGE WORSHIPPED. 525
* for rapacity, and that I thought them wicked. I replied
* however, that I compared them to eagles, not as to rapacity,
* but as to sharp-sightedness.' •
Being questioned as to the God they worshipped, they
answered, that they worshipped a God visible and invisible
— a God under a Human Form and a God without Form.
He told them, that we too on this Earth worshipped a God
visible and invisible, the invisible God being the Father, and
the visible the Lord, and that both are One as the Lord
Himself taught, saying, that whilst no man had seen the
Father, he who saw Him saw the Father.
Some Spirits from this second Earth were seen wor-
shipping an idol of stone like a man, but not handsome.
Swedenborg said to them, that they ought not to worship
what was dead but what was alive. They said in return,
that they knew God lived and not the stone, but when they
looked at the statue they were enabled to concentrate their
minds on the invisible Deity. He rejoined, that the invisible
God is only rightly approached through the Lord, who is
God visible in thought under a Human Form, and that thus,
and thus only, can Man be truly conjoined to his Maker.
Some good Spirits from the same Earth were questioned
as to whether in their world they were governed by kings.
They answered, that they did not know what kingly rule
was ; that they live under themselves in nations, families and
houses. It was then asked, whether they abode in security ;
to which they replied, tliat they did, for no one envied
another or sought to invade his rights. These queries
excited indignation, as arguing suspicion ; and turning on
Swedenborg, they exclaimed, " What need we more than
^^ food and raiment ? and with these, why should we not rest
" content !"
Being further examined as to their Earth, they said it
* No. 140.
626 SPINNING AND WEAVINO.
had green fields, gardens and orchards, and lakes abounding
in fish ; blue birds tipped with gold ; animals great and
small, and one of them like our camel. They do not eat the
flesh of their animals, but fish, fruit and pulse : nor do they
live in houses, but in groves, forming a roof against sun and
rain by twisting the boughs.
Their faces were not unlike those on our Earth, except
that the eyes and nose were small. This appeared to
Swedenborg a deformity, but they said, that they considered
a small nose and eyes to be marks of beauty.
^ A female was seen in a dress dotted with roses of various
* colours. I asked whence they derived their materials for
' clothing. They answered, that they gather from certain
^ plants a fibre which they spin into thread, and that they
^ then lay the threads in double and triple rows and fix them
* with a glutinous liquor. Afterwards they dye the cloth
* with the juices of herbs. It was shewn me how they make
* the thread. The women sit on the ground, and twist it
' with their toes, and when twisted, draw it towards them,
' and work it with the hand.'*
They said, that on their Earth every husband had but
one wife ; nevertheless there were harlots among them, but
that all such were at death cast into Hell as magicians. The
number of children in a family is from ten to fifteen.
A TniRD Earth.
The Spirits of this Earth were very different from the
Spirits of ours, and approach to them was therefore very
difficult. When Swedenborg asked them if they would take
a look at our world through his eyes, they declined the
pleasure, saying first, that they could not, and then, that they
would not. In the end, he persuaded them to witness a
representation of some of the finest palaces of Europe ; but
• No. 146.
ARBOREOUS ARCHITECTURE. 527
thcj made light of them, asserting, that on their Earth they
had far more magnificent stnictureB in living wood ; in proof
whereof they represented their sacred temples, which the
Spirits with Swedenborg confessed the most wonderful they
had ever seen.
These temples are constructed of growing trees, of great
girth and height, planted in rows. By exquisite art in
twisting and pruning, a floor is made of the lower branches,
galleries of the higher branches, and an archeil roof of the
topmost. Light is admitted into the vast interiors through
windows of crvstal.
The inhabitants live isolated in households, but assemble
in public worship. On these occasions they experience
internal joy, excited by the glory of the temple and the
worship. God, they adore under a Human Form, conse-
quently our Lord.'* They are likewise instructed by inter-
course with Spirits and Angels.
They dwell in low, oblong cottages set in plains ; high
places they consecrate to the Lord alone. Beds are ranged
like shelves round the walls. Opposite the door is an alcove
in which stands a table, and behind the table is a fire-place
wherein luminous wood is deposited, which lights up the
house as with burning charcoal.
They were asked, what was done to the Wicked on their
Earth. They replied, that a wicked person is not suffered
to exist. Whoever yields to evil, is reproved by a cert^n
Spirit, and threatened with death if he persist : if then he
does persist, he is taken off in a swoon. Thus their Earth
is preserved from pollution.
A Fourth Eartii.
This Earth is one of the smallest in the Universe, being
scarcely 250 miles in circumference. Its year consists of
♦- No. i:>4.
528 A UTTLE WORLD.
200 days, and its davs of 15 hoars. Its San is only aboat a
qaarter of the size of oars.
The houses of the people are long and low, with a
window for everT room ; the roofs are arched, and there is
a door in each gable. It was said, thev are bailt of earth
and covered with turf, and that the windows are closed with
a texture of transparent glass. Men, women and children
were seen. The faces of the women are full and handsome:
thev appeared as shepherdesses, and their flocks moved
wherever they pointed with their crooks. The sheep were
large, and had broad and woolly tails. Fields of com ripe
for harvest and of grass with flowers, trees laden with fruit,
like pomegranates, and shrubs with berries from which is
made wine, were also seen.
Them likewise, Swedenborg found confessing God
visible under a Human Form, and that at times He appears
to them as a Man ; and in general reports them as confirming
his own opinions on the Trinity, and complaining of the con-
fusion induced in their minds by Spirits from our Earth,
who held the common notions about a tri-personal Deity.
With Angels, the Inhabitants of that Earth hold such
easy and open relations, that they converse with them as
man with man and only discover they are Spirits by their
sudden disappearance from the field of vision —
^ I told them, that such was also the case on our Earth
^ in Ancient Times, as when Angels appeared to Abraham,
^ Sarah, Lot, the people of Sodom, Manoah and his wife,
' Joshua, Mary, Elizabeth, and the Prophets ; and that the
^ Lord appeared in like manner, so that they who saw Him
^ knew no otherwise, than that He was an ordinary man until
^ He revealed Himself; but at this day such appearances are
• No. 160.
ADVENTUROrS MoNKR. i529
A FiFBH Earth.
When he drew near the Spirits of this Earth, he found
himself regarded with suspicion. They had been afflicted
with the visits of some Monks, from the World of Spirits
about our Earth, bent on the conversion of Gentiles, and
who had annoyed them with nonsense about having faith in
what they chose to tell them. They had answered these
missionaries, that they did not know what ^ having faith
' meant,' since whatever they saw to be true, they believed
without effort : and whatever they did not so see, was incre-
dible by any effort. Swcdenborg assured them, that they
had done wisely in shunning their visitors, ' because their
' intention was, not to teach, but to secure gain and
' dominion ; that they study by various arts to captivate
^ men's minds, and then to hold them soul and body in
* slavery.
^ There are Spirits from our Earth, who rove about like
^ these l^Ionks in consequence of a passion for travelling
*' acquired in the world : in other Earths there is no such
^ custom of travelling as on ours/ *
The first Spirits of this Earth whom Swedenborg encoun-
tered were from its northern part, but he was afterwards
led to some from its western part —
^ These also, being desirous to know who and what I was,
^ immediately said, there was nothing in me but Evil, think-
*' ing thereby to deter me from approaching nearer. I was
*' enabled to perceive, that this was their manner of accosting
^ all who come to them ; and it was given me to reply, that
^ I well knew it to be so, and that in them likewise there
* was nothing but Evil, by reason that every one is bom
* into Evil, and therefore, that whatever proceeds from the
' Selfhood of Man, Spirit, or Angel is nothing but Evil, in-
• No. 169.
2 M
530 STRANQE MARRIAGE CU8T0MB.
' asmuch as all Good in every one is from the Lord. Hence
^ they digcemed that I was in" the Truth, and felt free to
^ converse with me/ * — ^whereupon a theological discussion
ensued in which Swedenborg found them in full accord with
himself.
On that Earth, there is national worship every thirtieth
day, whereat preachers discourse from pulpits on Divine
truths which lead to good life. Bevelations are made to
preachers and others early in the morning between sleeping
and waking, at which times Angels are heard speaking on
heavenly matters. When they awake, an Ang^ in white
is seen at the bedside and suddenly vanishes, which is
accepted as a sign, that what has been heard is Divine.
Their houses are of wood, low and flat-roofed* In the
front dwell husband and wife, in the middle, their children,
and at the back, the men and maid-servants. They are of
a celestial genius and find the joy and business of their lives
within the fEunily circle. They go naked, and in their
innocence are ignorant of shame.
Their Sun is of a flaming colour. The length of their
year is 200 days, and their day equals 9 of our hours.
They have perpetual spring and summer — their fields are
ever green and their trees in constant fruit. They drink
milk with water, and have it from cows which are woolly
like sheep.
Their marriage customs are curious. When a girl be-
comes marriageable, she is kept closely at home, and at a
certain time is taken to a connubial house where she is set
in a row with other virgins behind a screen, which reaches
to their waists. An old man and an old woman sit by to
preserve order, whilst young men in search of wives, enter
and inspect the market. When one sees a damsel to his
taste, he takes her by the hand and leads her off to his house
* No. 170.
HOW HWEDEXBORO SAW. 531
as his wife. No mistakes in choice are made, for in that
world there is no deceit; the face is the true picture of
the mind, and the youth recognizes his wife and the virgin
her husband by a sure instinct.
Thus ends Swedenborg's tour among the Spirits of the
Earths. What is to be said about it? Do you credit his
story ? asks a reader. I do not see why I should not. It
only appears incredible when ita conditions are kept out of
sight, and when (as is conunonly done) it is said, that he
professed to visit the Moon and Planets bodily — which he
expressly says he did not, maintaining in the most explicit
manner —
' That neither Spirits nor Angels can see anything on
' Earth, nor Man, with his bodily sight, anything in the
* Spiritual Worid.'*
Whatever Swedenborg might be, he was no fool, and
perfectly appreciated the natural objections which would be
raised to his claim, and thus calmly and reasonably answered
them —
' Knowing that many will doubt the possibility of seeing
anything on another Planet, I may state how it is effected.
Distances in the Spiritual World are altogether different
from distances on Earth. In the Spiritual World, distances
represent differences of character. Those who are alike,
appear in the same place ; those who are unlike, appear
apart. Hence to be present and converse with the Spirits
of any Earth, it was simply necessary that the Ijord should
induce such changes in the state of my mind as would bring
me into harmony with them. This done, we at once
appeared together.' t
In this manner he was brought into contact with the
• No. 135. t No. 135.
532 swedenborg's siNCERirr.
Spirits of the several Planets which he describes. Of one,
he writes —
' I was conducted thither by changes of the state of mj
* mind, which continued for about ten hours without inter-
' mission. These mental changes in the Spiritual World
' were in all respects the same as advances from place to
' place, or as travelling.'*
When thus connected with the Spirits, surrounding the
respective Earths from which they had arisen, he pursued
his advantage yet further ; he used their eyes with the eyes
of the Men and Women with whom they were associated,
as glasses wherewith to view their Earths ; even as he in
turn was in the habit of lending his eyes to Spirits, as a
means of renewing their acquaintance with scenes and
persons from whom death had divided them.
In a word, Swedenborg says, he approached the Planets
from their spiritual side — by an inversion of the method of
the astronomer. It is an explanation of the process of his
knowledge which, though quite open to question, cannot be
dismissed with a sneer.
Whether (admitting at least the plausibility of his
explanation) his account of the Earths is credible, is another
matter. That he was himself sincere — that he saw what he
says he saw, and heard what he says he heard — I regard as
beyond debate ; but the Spiritual World is by eminence the
land of illusions. According to his own testimony, your
shadow there irretrievably affects your experience : what
you arc you see. ' It is to be well observed,' he remarks in
the book before us, ' that the notion one holds on any subject
' is in the Other World reflected to the life.'f In the light
of this truth, we must read all his revelations about places
and persons ; discerning therein quite as much of his own
likeness as of the things themselves. It is quite certain,
* No. 157; 8^cc also Xo. 168. f ^o. 158.
THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME. 533
that no one else could repeat his planetary explorations and
render an account in perfect agreement with his. His tour
had a theological purpose ; his itinerary is a report on the
Keligion of the Universe; and everTwhere he finds the
Good in accord with him : nor may we feel surprise or offence
that it should be so, for, Who is there, that does not consider
his private opinions as one with Wisdom ?
Supposing we concede the reality of Swedenborg's rela-
tions, how rudely they overturn our common conception of
Civilization ! Beyond our Earth there are no Letters, no
Books, no Sciences, no Travelling, but one placid unvary-
ing round of domestic business and domestic joy. Freedom
of thought and speech, which we regard as the acme of
social culture, is unknown. Dissenters are not only tabooed,
but punished, and if obstinate, extinguished. Not in any
way do other worlds grow attractive under our explorer's
touch. Grateftil indeed may we be, that our lines are cast in
our naughty, bustling, superficial sphere. Odr place may
verily be in the Skin of the Grand Man, but we have no
desire to exchange it for any other organ or tissue. '^ Good I"
would say our Author ; '^ and in your content, behold the
^'vindication of the Divine Love in your creation and
" appointment I"
END OF VOL.1.
i
Id
I'
APPENDIX.
tSi
I
'.f.i
ir'
I
( 539 )
CORKECTIONS.
Note I. — Swedenborq at UpsAfji.
Following too implicitly preceding biographers, I have written at
page 30 of the present volume —
' In 1709, at the age of twenty-one, Swedenborg took the degree of
' Doctor of Philosophy * at Upsala.
Dr. Kahl kindly corrects me. He writes — ' Swedenborg never took
' this degree. He was only a student when he wrote his dissertations on
'Seneca, Publius Syrus, etc. Our Atterbom says somewhere, that
' Swedenborg was Doctor in Philosophy, but it is a mistake.*
Note H.— Tub Academies of Sciences of Upsala and Stockholm.
* In 1729 the Academy of Sciences in Stockholm elected Swedenborg
* a Member.* — Present Vol., p. 76.
Here again Dr. Kahl proves me wrong and sets me right. For
Stockholm read Upsala. * The Academy of Sciences at Stockholm was
* not instituted till 1739, after which date he was elected a Member.*
Note III.— SwEDENBORa*s Salary as Assessor.
His salary was 1,200 silver dalers, which at page 1 13 is estimated at
£44 8«. lOc^. Here too I owe a correction to Dr. Kahl, who states—
* A silver daler ai thai time was worth about 2s. 6d. of English money ;
' therefore you may reckon his income from the Assessorship at £150.*
I ao )
A22A3i^ZD CHHOiTOLOgCALLY.
Date
i£3
1709.
L. ^Tnapj Seneem et Pabw S^ri V™t fbrsam
ec alionm. seiectae xntenxix^ cam aanot. TTrafgni
et Grzca ineisoiK Sralrgeri notis Qliistrataa.
(^oas cum ctmseiiBa AmpL Fac. FIiiIq&. sotk
nintftratas joB pnesifio Vcri Amp&aBnni V^-
Faiuani ToEner^ FULmw Tlieoret. ¥tqL fie^. et
OnL pdbCco I'Tamfnf raodiaitt whrnittit ^^^^
Svedber;^^ in AaJt Gnatsr. ma}. d» 1 Jan.
1706:
1716.
Oan, 1715.
SluM, 1716.
nie-iSl
et
Parentis Optrmiy Canticizzn Sveciciim, Ungdoms
Begel oA iHeidaina Spegel [Instnietion for
YoGth and Bdlection tor Old Age]^ ex Ecckaiast.
c. xiL Latino Carmine exhihitimi ab T!iii-
STedbergioj fiEo. Scans, 1709.
Camena Borea com heroom et heroidmn fibctis
Indens : nre Fabellae Oridianis similes sab
Tariis nominibos scripts ab £. S., Sueco.
Giyphiswcddia, 1715.
Ludos HeUconins fire Carmina MisceDanea.
qius Tariis in lods cednit £. S.
Cantos Sapphicos in charissimi Parentis diem
natalem. Scaris^ 1716.
D»dalos Hjperboraeos, eller n&gra nja Matbe-
APPENDIX.
541
Date and FUee
of Publiestiun.
Btockholm,
1717.
Upsala,
1718.
UpMlA,
1718.
tikAra, 1718.
matiska och Phjsicaliska f 5rBdk och anmftrkniu-
gar for &r 1716 : som Velb. Hr Assess. Pilhcimcr
och aiidro sinrike i Sverigo hafvc gjordt och na
lid efter annan till allman ny tta Icmna. 6 Flockar.
Upaala^ 1716-18.
{The Northern Dcedalas^ or same new Matlie^
matical and Physical Attempts and Observations
for the year 1716.* which Assessor Polhem and
other ingenious men in Sweden have made and
published from time to time for the use of the
pullic. 6 Parts,)
Underr&ttelse cm thet fdrtenta Stierncsunds
ArbetCy thcs bruk och fortening. Stockholm y 1717.
{Information concerning the Manufacture of
Tin-plcUe at Stfemsundy afid its Use.)
m
Begcl-Konsten f 5rfattad i tijo bocker. Upsala.
{The Art of Rulesj in 10 Parts.)
F5rsok att finna Sstra och vostra lengden
igcnom M&nan, som til the Lftrdas omprdfvande
firamstalles. Vpsala^ 1718.
{Attempts to find tlie Longitude by mtans'of the
Moonj set forth for the judgmJbnt of the Learned.)
Om jordcues och planctcrncs g&i]g|och st&nd:
tliet ilr n&gra bevisliga skfil at jordcn aftager i
Ritt lopp och nu g&r l&ngsammaro Sn tilfbrcne;
goraiide vintcr och soinmar, dagar och niltter
langrCy i ansccnde til tidcn nu ftn f5rr. Skara.
{ On the Motion and Position of t/ic Earth and
PlanetSj in which are some conclusive proofs that
the Earth's course decreases in rapidity ^ being now
"^«*
C "uunz^uo.
fn T^zxtt^K BOO. ■
'n iif Z^Tt tf 'im
rr,k . ijii*rTi:n*.ii!*! iul Imi-cli^. S.'^asTinkfiL firk
liptinn ana cvm Xova Camisii iareatk^ce. AumM^
> Mamif 1721.
\
l/iu*. I Mrtliodiw Nora inTemendi Loiigitudines Llhxh
APPENDIX.
543
Date and Plaee
of Publication.
AumterdAin,
1721.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Stockholm,
1722.
rum, terra moriqiic, opo Luiue.
1721.
(Rcpriuted in 1766.)
Amstelodamt^
Lciptio,
1722.
Artificium Novum Mcchanicum Rcccptacula
Navalia, vulgo Dok appcllata, coiistruendi.
Amstelodamij 1721.
Nova Constructio Agji^cris sivo Molimiiiis
Aquatici. Amstdodami^ 1721.
Modus Medianice Explorandi VIrtutcs et Qua-
litates diversi generis, et Constructiuuis Navi-
giorum. A^nstdodami^ 1721.
Tills set of treatises, published at Amsterdam
in 1721, was re-issued in English by the Swcden-
borg Association as —
Some Specimens of a Work on the Principles of
Chemistry^ with other Treatises. Translated from
the Latin, with Introductory Kemarks, Biblio-
graphical Notices, Index, &c., bj Charles Edward
Strutt, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons
of Edinburgh, and dedicated, by pcmussion, to
the Baron Berzelius. Illustrated with 21 Plates.
London, 1847.
Ofbrgripeligc tankar om Svenska myntets
fdmedring och forho^ning. Stockholm^ 1722.
( On tJie Depreciation and Rise of the Swedish
! Currency.)
Miscellanea Observata circa res naturales ct
pnesertim circa Mincralia, Iguem et Moutium
Strata. Lipsicc^ 1722.
544
APPKRDIX.
Sduffbeck,
Bear Hftoi-
bwf, 17».
Dreeden and
Ldpsio,
1784.
(bk 3 Parts. De&ttad to Goont GhuteTua
Bonde.)
Miac^Dimeoram ObeervilkmQm drcm MinerdUfty
Fermm et Stalactites in CSsTernis Baomaimiaiiis.
Kampoiawn^ 1722.
(Fourth Part Dedicated to die Duke of
Bmnswick.)
The four Parts were re488ned nith other
Papers bj the Swedenborg Association as —
MiaceUaneoua 0b9ervatians connected wM the
Fhysicxd Scietuxs/ witi an Appendix coniaminff
Swedenborg^s Bapen from tie Acta Literaria
Svecto^ Translated from the Latin, with Intro-
ductory Bemarks, Bibliographical Notices, and
Index of Subjects, by C. E. Strutt Illustrated
with 9 ]^tes. London, 1847.
Opera Philosophies et Mineralia. Tres Tomi :
Tom. I. — Principia Rerum Naturalium si^e
Novomm Tentaminum Fhienomena Mundi £le-
mentaris Philosophice Explicandi.
Tom. II. — ^R^num Subterraneum sive Mine*
rale de Ferro deque Modis Liquationum Ferxi
per Europam passim in usum receptis; deque
conversione ferri crudi in chaljbem: de vena
ferri et probatione ejus; pariter de chymids
pneparitis et cum ferro et victriolo ejus factis
experimentis.
Tom. ni. — ^Begnum Subterraneum mve Mine-
rale de Cupro et Qrichalco modis liquationum
cupri per Europam passim in usum receptis : de
secretione ejus ab argento: de conversione in
Orichalcum: inque Metalla divcrsi generis: de
IPFEVDIZ.
MS
Datetnd FlMt
of Publieatloa.
Lapide CaUminari : de Zinco : de Vena Ctipri et
probatione ejus : pariter de ehjmiciB praBparatisi
et cmn cupro factis experimentis, &c, &c. Cum
figurifl aeneis. Dresden et LijmcB^ 1734.
The first volume was re-issued by the Sweden-
borg Association in two volumes as —
The Prtncipia; or^ the First PrindpUa cf
Natural Thinffs; being New Attempts toward a
Philosophical Explanation of the Elementary
World. Translated from the Latin, with Intro-
ductory Remarks, Index, &c., by the Rev.
Augustus Clissold, A.M. London, 1845-46.
Drefldon and
Leipsic,
1734.
ProdromusPhilosophiflBRatiocinantis de Infinite
et Causa Finali Creationis: deque Mechanismo
Operationis Anims et Corporis. Dresdes et
LipsicBj 1734.
Re-issued by the Swedenborg Assodation as —
The Philosophy of the Infinite; or^ Outlines of
a Philosophical Argument on the Infinite^ and the
Final Cause of Creation ; and on the Intercourse
between the Soul and the Body, Translated from
the Latin by James John Garth Wilkinson, with
an Introduction and Index of Subjects. London,
1847.
Amsterdam,
1741.
(Economia Regni Animalis in Transactiones
divisa: quarum hsc prima de Sanguine, ejus
Artcriis, Vcnis et Corde agit : Anatomice, Physice
et Philosophice perlustrata. Cui accedit Intro-
ductio ad Psychologiam Rationalem. Amstelo^
damij 1741.
Ditto.
(Economia Rcgni Animalis in Transactiones
546
of PXtb&aKwo.
1 £Tiia : qiumm Iubc Mcondm de Cerebri Motn et
Cortiee et de Animm Humaiia agit : Anatomice,
i Fti jske et Pkilocophioe perlmtntm. Avuiehdami^
1741.
ReHSBiicd in two Tolmnes br tbe Swedenborg
Association m —
Thu Ecomomy cf ike Amimal Kingdom ; con^
I sidifr^l Atuitomiealijfy Fkj^eall^ and PkHosopht'-
I cu//jf. Translated from the Latin bj the Rev.
' Aogustns ClLnold, AJI.« and edited, with Intro-
' ductory Bemarka, Indexes, Bibliographical
Xoticea, &c^ by James John Garth Wilkinson,
Member of the Boval College of Surgeons of
Lcmdon. London, 1S46.
Begnom Animate ^Vnatomice, Physiec et Philo-
sopluce periustratom ; cujus Pars Prima, De
Yisceribus Abdominis seu de Orgauis Kegionis
Inferioris agit. Hiyir CohuVkih, 1744.
Begnum Animate Anatomice, Physice et Philo-
sophice perlustratum ; cujus Pars Secunda. I)e
'■ Visceribus Thoracis sou de Organis Begionis
I Supcrioris agit. Hayir Comitum^ ITU.
Begnum Animale Auatomice, Physice et Philo-
sophice perlustratmn ; cujus Pars Tertia. l>c
Cute, Sensu Tactus, et Gustus ; et do Formis
Orgauicis in Genere, agit. Londini^ 1745.
Be-issued in English in two volmues as —
The Animal Kinfftiom^ amsidered Anatomicallyy
Physically^ and Pliilosophically. Translated from
the Latin, with Introductory Bemarks, ludexes.
Bibliographical Notices, &c., by James John
Garth Wilkinson. Loudon, 1843-44.
APPENDIX.
547
Date and PUce
of Publiration.
. London,
1745.
1733.
1710^9.
About
1743-45.
Ditto.
Do Cultu ct Amoro Dei; ubi agitur dc
Tclluris Ortu, Paradiso et Vivario, turn do Primo-
gcniti scu Adami Novltatc, Infantia ct Amorc.
Lon(lint\ 1745.
Pars II.— De Conjagio Adami, et de Anima,
Mente Intellectuali, Stata Integritatis, et Imagine
Dei. Londinij 1745.
rOSTHUMOUS WRITINGS,
Chmpo$ed before 1745.
Itinerarium (1733). Tuhingce^ 1840.
Ditto (1710-14, 1721-22, 1733-34, 1736-39),
StutiffarduFj 1844.
Hegnum Animale Aiiatomice, Phjsicc et
Pliilosophice perlustratum ciijus Pars IV. —
De CarotidibuB, de Sensu Olfactus, Auditus et
Visus, de Sensatione et AffectioDO in Gcncre, ac
de Intcllectu ct ejus Opcrationo agit. l^ubuigir^
1848.
Rogniim Animale Anatoinice, Physice ct Pliilo-
sophice perlustratum. (>ujus supplementum sive.
Par VI. Sect. I. — De Pcriosteo ct de Mamniis
agit. Sect. IL — De Cicncrationc, de Partibus
(icnitalibiis Utriusque Sexus, et de Formationo
Fujtus in Utcro agit. Tubinga^^ 1849.
This last volume has been translated into
English bv Dr. Gartli Wilkinson as —
The Gaicrative Organs^ consiikred Anatomic
548
ofPrnbUcatioa.
Aboot
eoSy, Pkyneallyj amd PkOomipkioaMjf. London,
1852.
Begnum Animale Anatomice, ^ysice, et
Fhilosophice perlnstrmtmn ; cnjos Para VII. de
Anima agit. TubingiE^ 1849.
OpascolaqacdamArgiuneiitiFhilosophi. None
primum edidit Jac Job. Garth WUkmson. Zoit-
dimi, 1846.
Translated as follows : —
Posthumous Tracts. — The Way to a Knowledge
of the Soul— Faith and Good Works.— The Red
Blood. — 7^ Animal Spirit. — Sensation^ or the
Passion of the Body. — The Origin and Propaga^
tion of the Soul. — Action. — Fragment on the Saulj
and the Harmony hetween it and the Body. Now
first translated from the Latin by J. J. Garth
Wilkinson. London, 1847.
There jet remain in manuscript manj of
Swedenborg^s physiological studies ; among them
a work on the Brain of upwards of a thousand
pages.
Clavis Hieroglyphica Arcanorum Naturalium
et Spiritualium per Yiam repnesentationum ot
correspondcntiarum. Londini^ 1784.
Printed by Hindmarsh from the original
manuscript.
An Hieroglyphic Key to Natural and Spiritual
Mysteries by way of Representations and Corre^
spondences. Translated and published by Robert
Hindmarsh. London, 1792.
( 549 )
SPIRITUAL AND THEOLOGICAL WRITINGS.
(With the titles and prices of the English editions published by the
Swedenborg Society, Bloomsbury Street, London.)
Dtte and Plae«
of Piibliration.
London,
1749-53.
Ix)ndon,
1753-56.
London,
1758.
Ditto.
Arcana Ccelestia qu» in Scriptura Sacra sea
Verbo Domini sunt detccta: Hie Primuni qu»
in Genesi. Una cum Mirabilibus quse visa sunt
in ^lundo Spiritunm ct in CgbIo Angclorum.
Pars I.— 1749. Pars IV.— 1752.
Pars II.— 1 750. Pars V.— 1753.
Pars III.— 1751.
Arcana Ccelcstia qn» in Scriptura Sacra, sen
Vcrbo Domini sunt detccta. Hie quas in
ExODO, &c.
Pars I.— 1753. Pars III.— 1756.
Pars IL— 1754.
Arcana Ccetestia: the Heavenly Mysteriea can-'
tained in the Holy Scripture^ or Word of the
Lord^ unfolded in an Exposition of Genesis and
Exodus: together with a Relation of Wonderful
Things seen in the World of Spirits and in the
Heaven of Angels. 12 vols.| As. each. Index in
2 vols., 20s.
De Coelo ct gus Mirabilibus, et do Inferno, ox
Auditis et Visis. Londinij 1758.
Heaven and Hell ; alsoj the Intermediate StatSj
or World of Spirits: a Relation of Things heard
and seen. Zs. ; or, with Preface bj Hartley of
Winwick, Zs. M.
De Telluribus in Mundo nostro Solari| qua
55»^
APPENDIX.
Loodon,
Ditto.
Ditto.
Tociuitnr Pknetse: et de Telhmbiis in Coelo
Astrifetro: deque illamm incolis; tmn de Spiri-
I tibos et Angelis iU; ex Auditia et Yiais.
i LomJiHij 1758.
' Oh the Earths in our Solar System^ €md on ike
Earths in the Siiarry Ileavens: with an account of
their inhahitamtSj and also of the Spirits and
Anyels there; from irAoi has been heard and
8J.
De Ultimo Judicio, et de Babylonia Destructa :
ita quod omnia, qu» in Apocaljpn pnedicta Bunt,
hodie impleta ant: £x An^tis et Yisis. Xon-
dini, 1758.
The Last Judgement and the Destruction of
Babylonj sheu^iny that all the Predictions in the
Bevelation are at this day fulfilled: being a
Relation of Things heard and seen. 8d.
De Nova Hieroaolyma et ejus Doctrina Coelesti :
ex Auditis e Ccelo. Quibus prsmittitur aliquid de
Novo Ccelo et Nova Terra, Londinij 1758.
On the New Jerusalem and its Heaiyenly
Doctrine^ according to what has been heard from
Heaven ; to which is prefixed information respect'
ing the New Heaven and the New Earth. 2s.
De Equo Albo de quo in Apocaljpsi, Cap.
XIX. Et dein de Yerbo et ejus Sensu Spiritual!
seu IntemOy ex Arcanis Ccelestibus. Londini^
1758.
On the White Horsey mentioned in the Bevela"
tion^ Chap, xix., vnth particulars respecting the
Word^ and its Spiritual Sense^ extracted from the
Arcana Coelestia, 4</.
APPENDIX.
551
Date and PUec
of Publieation.
AmsterdAin,
1763.
• Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
1764.
Doctrina Novsb Hierosolymas dc Domino.
Amstelodamij 1763.
The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem respecting
the Lord. To which arc Answers to Questions
on tlio Trinity, proposed by the late Kev.
T. Hartley, A.M. Is.
Doctrina Xova Hlerosolym® do Scriptura
Sacra. AnisUlodamij 1763.
The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem respecting
the Sacred Scripture. Is.
Doctrina Vit« pro Nova Hicrosolyma ex Prae-
ceptis Decalogi. Amstelodamij 1763.
The Doctrine of Life for Hie New Jerusalem
from the Commandments of the Decalogue. 6d.
Doctrina Novn Hierosolymas de Fide. Am^
stelodaviij 1763.
The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem respecting
Faith. Ad.
Continuatio de Ultimo Judicio : ct de Mundo
Spirituali. Amstelodamij 1763.
Inchided in tlie English edition of the Last
Judgement.
Sapieutia Angelica de Divino Amore ct de
Divina Sapientia. Amstelodamij 1763.
Angelic Wisdom concerning Hie Divine Love
and the Divine Wisdom. 2s.
Sapicntia Angelica de Divina Providentia.
Amstelodami^ 1764.
17G6l
1768.
Amsterdam,
1769.
IjOfldOfli
1769.
AmftordMD,
1771.
Amgdic Wiadom umuomimjf Ae IHmme
Si.
I
Ar-
Apocaljpu Berelita in qiia detegmitor
j cana quje ibt prȣcta mit, et Iiacieniu
: Utuenmt Amuielodamij 1766.
I Tke Apocalgpm Bevealed/ im wJUck are iit*
clo§ed ike Arcama ikerew forekM. 2 Vols. Sk
Deliti« SapientiJB de Amore GonjngiaE; pott
qnas Beqmmtor Tolnptmtes Tnianim de Amore
ScorUtorio. Ab Enuumele Swedenborg^^ Soeoo.
AmsUhdami^ 1768.
Confuffial Love and iU CkaHe Ddighis/ alto
Adulterous [SoorUtoiy is not neoeasarily Adnl-
teroiu] Love cmd tie Inmme FUatwrea. 4#.
Smmnario Expositio Doctrine Novas BccIesiiB
qus per Novam Hierosoljiiuun in Apocaljpa
intelligitnr. Ab Emannelo Swedenborg^ Sneoo.
Amstelodatnij 1769.
A Brief Exposition of the Doctrine of tke New
Churchy siffnified hy tke New Jerusaiem in tke
BevelaHon. lOd.
De Commercio AnimaB et Corporis, qnod credi-
tnr fieri vel per Infloxum Phjncmn, vel per
Inflaxmn Spiritaalem, vel per Harmoniam Pno-
stabilitam. Londini^ 1769.
The Intercourse between the Soul and tke Body^
which is supposed to take place either by Physical
Influx^ or by Spiritual Influx^ or by Pre-established
Harmony. Ad.
Vera ChiiBtiiana Beligio, continens Universam
Theologiam Nov® Eccleai® a Domino apud
APPENDIX.
553
Dat« and Place
of Publication,
1745-47.
I
Danielem, cap. vii. 13, 14 ; et in Apocalypsi, cap.
xxi. 1, 2, prsedictas. Ab Emanuclc Swedcnborg,
Domini Jcsu Christi Servo. AmsteIodami\ 1771.
The True Christ icm Bel iff ion ; or the Universal
Theology of the New Church ; foretold 4y the Lord
in Daniel vii. 13, 14; and in the Apocalypse xxi.
1, 2. 7s.
POSTHUMOUS WRITINGS.
Svedenborg^s Drdmmar 1744Jemte andra bans
anteckningar. Efter original-bandskriftcr Med-
delade af G. E. Klemmino. StocJcholnij 1859.
[Swedenborg^s Dreams in 1744, together with
some oilier Memoranda of his. Edited from tbe
Original by G. E. Klemmino.)
Owing to the character of some of the entries,
Mr. Klenuning only printed 100 copies of this Diary.
Adversaria in Libros Testamenti. E cbiro-
grapho ejus in Bibliotheca Regiae Academies
Holmiensis asservato.
Pars I. — Vol. I. Genesis. Tuhinga'^ 1847.
II. „ „ 1848.
III. „ „ 1861.
IV. Genesis et Exodus.
TubingfF^ 1852.
V. Exodus. „ 1853.
VI. „ „ 1854.
Pars II. — Continens Josuam, Judices, Uuth,
Samuelem, Reges et Chronica. Tuhinga*^ 1842.
Pars III. — Continens Leviticum, Numeros et
Deuteronomium. Tubingo'y 1842.
2 o
664
IHtoftnd Place
of Publication.
APPENDIX.
Pars lY. — Contmens Jesajam et Jeremiam.
StuUgardice^ 1843.
1747, with
fntermUsiong
to 1764. '
Eman. Swedenborgii Diarii Spiritualifl. £ chi-
rographo ejus in Bibliotheca Begie Universitatia
Upsaliensis asservato.
Pars L— Vol. I. TuhingtB, 1844. Vol. IT. 1845.
E chirographo ejus in Bibliotheca Regiae Aca-
demia^ Holmiensis asservato.
Parall.
SttUtgardice^
,1843.
in.
Vol. I.
n
1844.
„II.
n
1844.
IV.
Tvbinga,
-1843.
V.
Vol. I.
n
1846.
„n.
n
1847.
VI.
»
1845.
VII.
Vol. I.
n
1846.
„ii.
»
1854.
Sect. III.
>»
1859.
Continens Narratianculaa de Vitis Hominam in
Diario E. Swedenborgii commemoratorum ; quibus
adjecta est Genealogia Famili» Nobilis Swedenbor-
gi». Auctore Achatio Kahl, Archidiacono Templi
LundensiB; etc.
Sect IV. TubinffCBy 1860.
Continens opusculum posthumum de Conjugio.
Two volumes of the Diary have been translated
into English — Part I. by the Rev. J. H. Smithson
of Manchester, and Part II. by the Rev. George
Bosh of New York. Their enterprise met with little
encouragement. Indeed a leading member of the
New Jerusalem Church openly expressed the wish,
that the manuscript of the Diary in transit from
Sweden to Germany had been sunk to the bottom
of the sea.
APPENDIX.
555
Dtte and Place I
of Pablication.
1769.
Index Biblicus sire Thesaarofl Bibliorum Em-
blematicus et Allcgoricus.
Vol. L— Tubififfce.— 1859.
11. „ 1860.
III.
n
1863. In progress,.
Apocaljpsis Explicata secundum Sensum Spi-
ritualem ; ubi Rcvelantur Arcana, quae ibi pras-
dicta, ct hactenus recondita fuerunt. Londini^
tjpis EobertI Hindmarsh, No. 32, Clcrkenwell
Close. Vol. I.— 1785. Vol. II.— 1786. Vol.
III.— 1788. Vol. IV.— 1789.
The Apocalypse Explavied according to the
Spiritual Sense : in which are revealed the Arcana
which are there predicted^ and which have hitherto
been deeply concealed. 6 Vols. 4^. each.
Summaria Expositio Sensus Intemi Prophet-
arum et Psalmorum Davidis. Londini^ 1784.
A Summary Exposition of the Internal Sense
of the Prophets and Ralms. Is.
Quaestionos Novem de Trinitate, etc., ad
Emanuelem Swedenborg proposit® a ThomA
Hartley ; tum illius responsa. Londini^ 1785.
These Questions and Answers are printed as an
Appendix to the English edition of the Doctrine of
the Lord.
Dicta Probantia Veteris et Novi Testamenti
collecta et breviter explicata. TMngoe^ 1845.
Dc Domino et de Athanasii Symbolo. Lon-
diniy 1840.
2 o 2
Doctrina Norte HicrosolymsB dc Chantatc.
Londini, 1840.
Canoncs, seu Integra Theologia, Novre Ec-
cleBisB. De Deo Uno et Infinito. I>e Domino
Kedemptorc; ct de RodeinptioDe. De Spiritu
Sancto. De Divina Trinitate. Londini, 1840.
Coronis aeu Appendix ad Veram Chriatiancm
Ileligionem.
Invitatio ad Not am Ecclesiam.
Printed by Dr. Tafel, in Part VII., Vol. I., of
Spiritual Diaiy.
The Coronis or Appeiuiix to At True Chnatian
Jtetigiofij treating of the Four Churches on thta
JEarth aincx Creatim. 8d.
Any corrections or additions In this list will be tluuik-
fuUy received by
W. W.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Abbahaic, matter-of-fact BiUicbI his-
tory begins with, i, 8S7; derired
from Heber, a degeuerate stook of
the Ancient Chnroh, 348; immediate
ancestors idolators, 348; led ftom
idolatrjr to the worship of God
Schaddai ; in him the Jewish Churoh
began, 849.
Abrege dm Ouvraget cf Em, JSweden-
horg, i, S31.
Abstraction, in. Men appear in the
Spiritoal World, i, S66.
Acqoisitiyeness, lives goremed by,
u, 158.
Action and Reaction penrade the
Unirerse, i, 90.
Aotires and Passires, i, 90, 161.
Adam, birth from an egg in Paradise,
1, 165 ; education, 167 ; Ere hatched
and introduced to him, 170.
Adam, not an indiTidnal bat the Most
Ancient Chnroh, whioh'was eToWed
from a race that lived as beasts,
i, 828; its fkll began in the nodoD
of independence, ii, 118.
Adam, Eve taken out of him : expla-
nation of the allegory, ii, 868.
Adamic Hearens, i, 338.
Adamites did not eat the flesh of ani-
mals, ii, 577.
Admiralty, Swedenborg before the
Board of Longitude in London,
ii, 827.
Adulteries, rarieties of, ii, 409.
Adulterous Lore can only be under-
stood from Goi\{ugial LoTe^ ii, 407.
Adultery a synonym fi>r Hell, ii, 406,
412; the Wicked see no difference
between it and Bfarriage, 408.
Adrent, end and method of the Lord's,
i, 370; its two grand purposes, ii,
106.
AdTcnt, the Lord's second: Heoannofc
come again in person, ii, 565; He
makes EUs Adrent in the rerelatioa
of the Spiritual Sense of the Word,
566 ; and in the truths rerealed by
Swedenborg, i, 286 ; ii, 572.
Adoenana on the Old Testament,
i, 249 ; quoted, 288, 295.
Africa, a Churoh in, ii, 19.
Africans, the most intelligent of the
Gentiles, ii, 9; worship God as a
Bfan, 204; most bdored of the
Gentiles in Heaven, 482 ; Sweden-
borg converses with, 482 ; truths of
the New Church diflbsed among, 488.
Agnes, St., ii, 455.
Air, the fourth Element, compressed
becomes Water, i, 90, 128.
Algebra, book on, by Swedenborg,
1,60.
Alleine's Alarm, U, 557 n.
Ahns-giring, u, 163, 549; dlMOOzagdl
by Swedenborg, 844.
Allston, eril thoughts, il, 998.
Analysis, or Induction, proceeds from
Experience to Causes, i, 152 ; and
bunds not in air, bat on the solid
earth, 154.
Ancients, the, thought of God at a
Blan,ii,204.
fiCH
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
AngclH, JoRpor Svcdberg'B : an Angel
rouHortod with him, i, 2 ; another
dlriH^tod liiH Htudios, 8 ; language of
Aiif^rlfi, G; a hoax, 24.
AnffoU, hrcd on Karth, i, 145; a kind
of hiicUigont gases, 166 ; debate
with Adam's soul, 169.
Angflls, all, wore once Men, i, 475;
Aiigids and Men are one Man, 459,
it, 5, l.MO, 068; invested in the purer
Huhittanous of Nature, i, 258, 262 ;
know as little of Men as Men do of
thnni, 460; united to Man bj the
Word, 463.
Atigtds, the ]x>rd constantly before
thorn, i, 427; however they turn
tlioy Iwhold the Spiritual Sun, ii,
908; their relations to the Sun, i,
426; their circumstances minutely
represent their thoughts and affec-
tions, i, 261; ii, 539; times and
seasons, i, 428; time, 429; space,
431; travelling, 260; homes, 432;
palaces, 433 ; garments, 438 ; power,
438 ; and equal to their reception of
Divine Truth, 439 ; one can put to
flight a troop of infcmals, ii, 541 ;
their exceeding wisdom, i, 440;
worship, 445 ; innocence, 448 ; peace,
451 ; happiness, 451 ; each happy to
his full degree, ii, 244; govern-
ments, i, 471 ; employments, 473.
Angels, their language spontaneous,
i, 454; in speech they get rid of
time, space, and person, ii, 133;
converse with Man in his own
tongue, i, 456-59; write spontane-
ously, 464; writings and books,
464.
Angels, all In&nts become, i, 466;
nursed by women who love them,
466 ; a girPs school, 467 ; a third of
Heftren from Infimts, 468; Qentiles
'*' s«oaiTod into Heaven, 468.
Angels cluster in SocietiaB
to character, i, 414;
perish after death, 415.
Angels are perfect men and
i, 434 ; but smaller than oo eai^
260 ; their beauty, 435 ; marriiigei,
436; an angelic wedding^, u, 854;
description of a couple fixMii tiw
inmost Heaven, 406 ; man m^h^ ^ijl^
in Heaven called one Angel ; enjoy
sexual intercourse, bat hame no
children, i, 435 ; ii, 360.
Angels do not love the Lord as P^non
but as Goodness, ii, 169 ; cannot eay
three Gods, 529; utterly r^ect tiw
tenet, that the Understanding is to
be subject to Faith, i, 274; ii, 180;
no two perfectly ag^reed in opinien,
ii, 644.
Angels defined, i, 477 ; their Ioto and
wisdom the Lord in them, ii^ 243*
every Angel based in Self-Love and
therefore includes a Devil, ii, 241,
288, 553; govern the Hells, i, 498;
Devils as seen by them, 492.
Angels, Celestial, the Cardiac Kingdom
of Heaven, ii, 230 ; their chai«c-
tcristics, i, 417-419 ; have the keen-
est sensation of independent life, and
the clearest knowledge that they live
from God, ii, 239; their loveliness
i, 436 ; go naked, 438 ; present with
Man in infancy, ii, 187 ; present in
the Celestial Sense of Scripture, 131 ;
love butter, i, 296 ; ii, 577.
Angels, Natural, their characterisdea,
i, 417 ; the simple were attached to
the Jewish Church, 369.
Angels, Spiritual, the Pulmonic King-
dom of Heaven, ii, 230 ; their charac-
teristics, i, 417-419 ; present with
Man in childhood, ii, 187 ; present
in the Spiritual Sense of Scriptoxe,
13J ; love milk, i, 296; ii, 577.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
559
Animal Kingdom (Regnum AnimaU)
poblished, i, 120; roTiewed, 149-156;
nnfinished, 155 ; Emeraon's opinion,
180 ; unnoticed by the public, 243 ;
how Swedenborg advanced on it, ii,
€62 ; jet some of his revelations
therein anticipated, 665.
Animah) bred from Plants, i, 163.
Animals, distinction between Man and,
ii, 470, 558; their will and intellect
cohere, and their life may be com-
pared to that of a sleep-walker, 471 ;
not immortal, 472.
Animal Spirits, met Swedenborg's
notion of the Soul, i, 132; consist of
Second Finitcs or the First Element,
135 ; reside within the White Blood,
135, 138; the Brain their organ,
and the Nerves their conduits, 138;
difihsed over the whole Body, 139;
their vortical motion, 140; not the
Soul, but the Soul's organ, 140, 146;
survive death, 143.
Animal Spirits, are impure in thote
who eat gross and impure food, ii,
577.
Anna, Empress of Russia, ii, 89.
Anne, Queen of England, i, 32, 247.
Antediluvians, Hells of, i, 836.
Anthropomorphism, i, 275.
AnH^aeobin^ on Creation, i, 172 n.
Antipodes, Heaven and Hell are, i, 486,
ii, 241 ; proved by the appearance of
Devils from Heaven, i, 492; Hell
governed by the opposition, 498;
hence results equilibrium, 501 .
Apocalypse, its exposition promised,
ii, 14; commanded by a voice fh>m
Heaven, 15 ; a prophetic description
of the Last Judgement of 1757, 310;
the story of the trial and victory of
goodness in every heart, 311.
Apocalyp$e Explained {Apoeali/p$i§ Ex-
plieaia) noticed, ii, 309; wnfinishf>d,
809 ; superior to ApoetdjgMe Revealed,
310; translated into English by Rev.
Wm. Hill, 597.
Apoealypee Revealed^ {Apoealypeit Re-
velata), reviewed, ii, 309-323 ; trans-
ited into English by Dr. Tucker,
597.
Apollo, ii, 51.
Apostles, each received the same Spirit,
but manifested it according to hii
character, U, 544.
Apostles, the Twelve, sent to Sweden-
borg by the Lord, ii, 547; preach
the doctrines of the New Church in
the Spiritual World, 568.
Apostolic Word : diilerence between it
and the Word, ii, 323, 825.
Appearances, in the Word, I, 360-862 ;
not to be mistaken for truths, ii,
127; confirmed become fallacies,
210; Man appean to live of himself,
ii, 239; his independence a mere
appearance, 251 .
Approbation, Love of, life governed by,
ii, 151.
Arcana Gosletfui, written and published,
i, 310-320 ; reviewed, 825-381 ; trans-
lated into English by Rev. John
Clowes, il, 597 ; Spirits of Mercury
pronounce it superficial and common-
place, i, 507 ; road in Heaven, ii,
478 A.
Arhusia, Christina, third wiib of Bishop
Svedberg, i, 60.
Arianism, a damnable heresy, ii, 644 ;
would have destroyed the Church
had not the Council of Nice sanctioned
the doctrine of tri-penooaliim, 115,
280, 542, 544.
Aristotle, fancied the Universe infinite,
i, 101 ; the notion reftited, 102; cited
in proof, that lifb is the action of
God, and that His presence is im-
mortality, 146; taught that the Boil
560
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMEg.
is from the Father and the Body
from the Mother, 148 n, ii, 103.
Aristotle, his spiritual knowledge de-
rived from tradition, ii, 135, 138;
appears to Swedenborg, 475.
Arminian Magazine^ i, 220, 222 n, 226,
227, ii, 593; Wesley s fact and
fiction, i, 228.
Anninianism, unsatisfactory, ii, 295-
296, 551-552.
Amdt, Garden ofParadUe^ i, 8, 33.
Arnold, Dr., on the 18th century, i, 321.
Arnold, Matthew, on logic and tmth,
ii, 128fi; on history, 140.
Asceticism, difficult and superfluous,
i, 479-480, 482.
Athanasian Creed, ii, 431 ; cited in
aanction of the Doctrine of the
Lord, 108, 1 15 ; on a good and bad
life, 144.
Athanasius converses with Swedenborg
and bewails his condition, ii, 115.
Atheism, Man naturally tends to, ii,
258; but for Revelation we should
know nothing of God, 276; Self-
Lovo atheistical, 135; the impure
are Atheists, 129 ; all Evil Spirits
deny God, i, 498, ii,526; and worship
some potentate among themselves,
206 ; the confession of three persons
as God leads to Atheism, 526.
Atomic Theory, i, 179.
Atmosphere, in Heaven corresponds to
Use, is the continent of its heat and
light, and condensed is the ground
of the Spiritual Worid, ii, 217.
Atonement, absurdity and horrors of
the orthodox view, ii, 183, 402.
Atterbom, apocryphal story about
Virgil and Swedenborg, ii, 346.
Angustine, St«, appears to Swedenborg,
U, 484.
Angustos, ii, 347 { interview with
Swedenborg, 849.
Authoresses, originality tested in tbe
Spiritual World, ii, 369.
Authority, impotence of infmlKMe, lit
252.
Avarice shuts the mind to Heaven, i,
353 ; is madness, 493 ; of the JewB,
353, 364 ; of the Quakers, 388.
Baazius, Dr., i, 10.
Babylon, is Popery, ii, 9, 311; the
whore denounced in the Swedish
Diet, 81.
Bachelors and Spinsters after death,
ii, 360.
Bacon, i, 55 ; rivalled by Wilkineon,
177 ; on aphorisms, ii, 21 ; on the
love of truth, 174.
Balaam and his ass, i, 349.
Baptism, a sig^ that the Man ia to &e
regenerated, ii, 37 ; instead of cir-
cumcision a sig^ of introduction to
the Church, and void of spiritual
effect, 562 ; practised in the Spiritoal
World, 562.
Baptists in Sweden, i, 188.
Barrett, Rev. B. F., ii, 653.
Barruel, ii, 93 n.
Barthelemon, ii, 599.
Bateman, Henry, on the cause of
Hindmarsh's expulsion from his
own New Jerusalem, ii, 603 ; plans
a Swedenborgian college, 635.
Baxter, Richard, i, 242.
Baylon, ii, 66.
Beasts, the Pre-Adamites Uved as, i,
327 ; in himself Man is a Beast, 328.
'BohximoTiVnAnti-SwedenhoTg answered
by Noble, ii, 614.
Bebelius, i, 5.
Beggars after death, i, 292 ; Sweden-
borg gave nothing to, ii, 344.
Behm, Sara, first wife of Jesper Sved-
berg and mother of Swedenborg^ i,
5; her death, 17,
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
561
Behmen, Jacob, ii, 835, 582 ; was not
read by Swedenborg, i, 189.
Belief defined, ii, 171 ; to say you
believe what you do not understand
18 to talk nonsense, 180.
Benedict XIV., i, 120; among the
most wicked, il, 450.
Bentham, ii, 18.
Bcnzelius, Anna, Swedenborg' 8 sister,
1,41.
Bcnzelios, Archbishop Eric, Sweden-
borg's brother-in-law: Letters to
bim from Swedenborg, i, 37, 40, 55,
60 ; on novelties, 61 ; on the Sun,
61 ; on his anhappiness, 62 ; on
mathematicians, 71; dedication to
him of The Infinite, 98.
B^>ranger'8 AtUobiography^ ii, 447 n.
Bergia, Sara, second wife of Jesper
Svedberg : their courtship, i, 19 ; her
death, 60 ; her will, 73.
Berg^trom, Swedish innkeeper in
London, i, 231, ii, 329; remini-
scences of Swedenborg, ii, 330 ; visits
Swedenborg in his last illness, 586.
Berkeley, i, 175, 176, ii, 460 n; com-
bined with Swedenborg by Tulk,
616.
BerUn in 1738, i, 76.
Beskow, Baron, ii, 666 n.
Betrothals and Nuptials, ii, 892.
Beyer, Dr., i. 180; account of the
beginning of Swedenborg's visions,
244 ; meets Swedenborg and is con-
verted by him, ii, 300 ; writes to ask
why he has not published the works
ordered by the I/ord, 101 ; argues
with Oetinger, 335 ; prosecuted for
bis Swedenborgianism, 488; makes
a DccUration to the King, 490.
Beyer, Dr., Letters from Swedenborg,
with copies of the Apoctdypte Re-
vealed; expects a commotion among
the English Bishops; explains why
he has not quoted Paul in the Areama
Cceleetiaf ii, 824 ; advises caution in
treating of the New Church, 831,
and expectations concerning, 832 ;
with copies of Brief Expoeitiony 448,
which on news from Sweden he
withdraws, 444 ; on a mysterious ex-
pedition to Paris, 447 ; on the rumour
that be was ordered out of that city,
459 ; asserting bis only offence to be
the worship of the Lord Jesus Christ,
494; his hopelessness of Sweden,
496 ; about a boy who sees visions,
498; about the death of Beyer's
wife, 499; about his departure for
Amsterdam to publish the True
Chrietian HeUgitm, 501 ; with his
manifesto against Emesti as good
for Ekebom likewise, 518.
Bible, a Swedenborgian, ii, 53; the
Hebrew Bible true, 141 ; Qnisoton
the Bible, 142.
Bibles, Swedenborg's, ii, 843 ; Schmi-
dius his hand-book, 844.
Biblical infidlibiUty, ii, 657 ; its frmuda-
lent defences, 658.
Binney, anticipated, i, 485w
Biographie ^TmoerseUe on Swedenborg,
ii, 447 n.
Biron, ii, 89.
Bishops, English, Swedenborg con-
verses with in the Spiritual World,
ii, 801 ; overheard from Heaven by
Qeorge IL, 803 ; the case explained
to him, 308; he orders them off, 804;
their patronage, 805; treatment of
Swedenborg's books, 679.
Blake, WUliam, u, 618, 640.
Blood, the. Articles on, i, 123-124
whatever exists in the Body pre-
exists in the Blood, 188 ; the science
of the Blood includes all sciences,
184.
Blood, Red, divisible into thrae, i, 182;
562
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
no aiiigle compoand entity in Nature
more simple and perfect than a red
blood globnle, 134, ii, 235; it oon-
sists of BIX globules of white blood,
with a cnbe of salt for a centre, i, 1 35 ;
originates in the stomach, 138;
motion rotatory, 140.
Blood, White, nourished from ether
through the lungs and skin, i, 138 ;
the vesture of the animal spirits,
138 ; motion spiral, 140.
Blood, its heat derived from the
Spiritual Sun, ii, 228 ; red, because
it corresponds to Love, 229.
Bodama, Tisula, understands Sweden-
borg, i, 322.
Body derived from the Mother, i, 1,
ii, 103, 853; projected from the
Brain, ii, 227 ; everything of the
Body may be referred to something
in the Brain, 228.
Boerbaave, i, 66, 67.
Bohemian Mines visited by Sweden-
borg, i, 79.
Bohn, H. G., i, 96.
Bonde, Count, i, 67 ; Swedenborg
writes to him on intercourse with
Spirits, ii, 580 n.
Bonington, William, ii, 599.
Books compiled in the Spiritual world
from the memories of the authors,
i, 41 1 ; books and libraries in Heaven,
465 ; Swedenborg' 8 own works read
there, ii, 478.
Book- Worms dwell in caves, study by
candle-light, and are afflicted with
mice and other vermin, i, 292.
Borowski's lAfe of EarU, ii, 70, 73.
Boston, centre of American Sweden-
borgianism, ii, 648.
Bourignon, Kant on, ii, 74.
Boyle, i, 66.
Boys fighting in the streets, i, 803;
Angels see them through Sweden-
berg's eyes, 396; bojs and girb at
play, ii, 366.
Bradley, i, 247.
Brahe, Count, appears to Swedeabofg
after his execution, i, 403.
Brain, the abode of the Soul, i, 106;
its motion coincident with resptrmtifln,
124, 139 ; the organ of the anioial
spirits, 138; Swedenborg's mano-
■cript on, 155.
Brain, the, as shared by the Will and
Understanding, 1, 343 ; every roUtion
and thought inscribed on, 410; its
relation to the Body, 417, which is
shot forth from it, ii, 227 ; is in the
Human Form, i, 421 ; is the habi-
tation of Good Affections, ii, 187 ; a
condition and limit of regeneratioa,
190, 553; Swedenborg's descrip*
tion of its functions not conaiBteDty
235.
Brayley, E. W., ii, 641.
Brief Exposition {SumnuMria JE^xptmiio
DoctrifuE Nova EccUnoB) reviowedf
ii. 427-442.
Brockmer, Fetter Lane, London :
Swedenborg lodges with him, i, 219,
ii, 574; his curious tale, i, 221-225;
cross-questioned by Hindmarsh, 225,
227 ; his opinion of Wesley, 229.
Brontd, Charlotte, on woman's desire
for a master, ii, 366.
Brotherton, Edward, an angelic charao-
ter, ii, 640.
Brotherton, Joseph, ii, 611.
Brougham, Lord, i, 187.
Browell, Capt:, ii, 331.
Browne, Sir Thomas, on correspon-
dences, i, 332.
Brunner of Upsala, i, 4.
Brunswick, Rudolph Duke of, i, 67;
Swedenborg dedicates to him J#i#.
oeUaneoui ObservationSf Pt. ir, 68,
and Opera FhHoippkioa ei if uwmfia,
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
563
82 ; his death, 83 ; his honntiftil
patronage, 82, 174.
Buffon and Swedenhorg's iVtnctpwi,
i, 96.
Burchardt, German Printer, goes to
Sweden and is rained, i, 11.
Bargman, i, 220, 225.
Burkhardt, ii, 582, 588 n.
Butler, Bishop, i, 175, ii, 125, 669; on
the use of glasses for the eyes, ii, 464.
Bums, Robert, ii, 56, 613.
Bush, George, ii, 652.
Batter disliked by Spiritual Angels,
and liked by Celestial, i, 296.
Butter, Henry, ii, 641.
Cakr, Michael, i, 224.
Cain commenced the Sacred Scriptaret,
i, 239.
Calvin, Svredenborg's acquaintance
with, ii, 429, 440; took his texts
from Paul and none from the Gospels,
826.
Oamena Borea^ i, 41.
Canaan signifies corrupt external wor-
ship, i, 342.
Canaan, seat of the Most Ancient
Church, i, 329 ; thus selected for the
Jewish Church, 359.
Cauaanitcs destroyed, and why, i, 360.
Canning, George, on creation, i, 172 n.
Canrobert, Marshal, ii, 646.
Cares shut up Heaven, i, 291.
Carlscrona Dock, 1, 52.
Carlson, i, 220 n.
Cartnina Jiuedlanea, i, 44.
Carl vie, Thomas, on the re -appearance
of Charles XII, i. 41 ; Wolf's philo-
sophy, 78 ; seven planets, 160 n ;
thu pasHSge from darkness to light,
246; the summons worship or bo
damned, 255; the eighteenth cen-
tury, 321; the Spiritual and the
Practical, 439 » ; stopidity, 493; God
revealed in history, ii, 140 ; truth of
the Bible, 141 ; influences about
childhood, 189 ; passage from Crom-
well, 205 ; hope is Man's all, 260 n ;
George II, 307 m; anarchy, 613 n;
similarity of Carlylo's best utterances
to Swedenborg's, 673.
Castel, WiUiam, u, 61.
Catherine II, ii, 87.
Catholics in the World of Spirits before
the Last Judgement, ii, 8, 10-12 ;
visited by Angels and dispersed,
12-13 ; the good instructed by Pro-
testants, 13.
Catholics, not a Church, ii, 21 n; hosts
of them go to Heaven, 448; their
cloudy state in the World of Sphrits,
448 ; held the same doctrine before
the Reformation as the Protestants,
427; think more of rites than doctrine,
428 ; will enter the New Church
before Protestants, 434.
Celestial Kingdom of Heaven, i, 417.
Celestial Sense of the Word, ii, 124.
Celibacy, of youth neither chaste nor
unchaste, ii, 371 ; is not Chastity,
often its opposite, 871 ; minds of
Celibates nasty places, 372 ; Henry
James on tlie proneness of Celibacy
to impurity, 373 ; the ascetic curse
inherited by Protestanta, 374.
Celsius, Dr., ii, 344.
Chalmers, Dr., ii, 55, 480.
Changuion, i, 123, ii, 421.
Channing, Dr., on the Lord's advents,
i, 286.
Charity^ Doetrime of [Dodrina Chari-
taUt) reviewed, ii, 144, 151-185.
Charity, consists in shunning evils as
sins, and then in doing good, ii, 151 ;
in every duty righteously fulfilled,
i, 485, U, 27, 159, 549; not alms-
giving, ii, 28; simulated by Self-Love,
161.
564
INDEX TO BOTH T0LUME9.
Charles XI. fiiTonn Jesper Srtdberg^
i, 7, 9-11 ; is the deslh of JemfeUt,
18 ; a serere king, and his sad
opinion of mankind, 18 ; re-muted
to his wife after death, 399.
Charles XIL succeeds to the throne,
18 ; conspired against by Denmark,
Russia, and Pbland, 20; taxes Sweden
hesTily, 20 ; Sredberg remonstrates
with him on behalf of the clergj,
21-23 ; creates him Bislu^ of Skara,
82 ; defeated and takes refuge in
Turkey, 41; returns suddenly, 48;
appoints Swedenborg Assess^ of
Mines, 48 ; aridimetical discussions,
49 ; engages him in engineering
works, 52 ; wishes him to marry
Polhem^s daughter, 52; lisited by
Bishop Syedberg, 53; lays nege to
FrederJckshall, and gets Swedenborg
to assist him, 55; his death, 56;
his notation based on 64, 68 ; cited
as an example of true courage,
148.
Charles XII. after death : his obstinaey,
his fights with his wife, and conquest
by her, i, 397 ; his passion for do-
minion, and his Atheism, 398; denres
to be the leader of Hell : reduced to
idiocy, 399 ; risits Queen Christina,
402 ; cited as an instance of infernal
marriage, ii, 390, 392 n.
Chastity, is found alone in Marriage, ii,
371 ; is not Celibacy, 371 ; not pre-
dicable of Eunuchs, 371 ; nor of those
who refirain from renery for yarious
outward reasons, nor of Monks and
Nuns, 372.
Chemistry, Swedenborg's, i, 64.
Cheyreuil, ii, 447.
Childhood, unspeakable importance of
the influences around, ii, 189.
China, the Ancient Word probably in,
i«340.
CluMae, shocked at die Baiae «r I
i, 380: m the Spudtaal Wctli. i,
484.
Christian YL after death, i, «89l
Christians and Gentiles^ i, S79l
Christiaiis, Early, too simple to leesife
the lull doctrine of the Trinitj, S,
115, or the Spiritual Senae eC ths
Word, 139.
Christina, Queen, house in Bobs^ ^
119; talk with the Pepe, 408; hs-
witched by Babylon, ii, 88.
Church, the, defined: is the Loid in
Man, ii, 39 ; the Locd is wedded
to the Church, 370 ; difleieneea of
opinion would haye added to its gkvy
had Charity been its head, 888 ; coa-
stituted by the understanding of the
Scriptures, 134; begins in Repentanee,
554.
Church, a, always exists od Earth,
ii, 138 ; it is suflicient that there be
a Church for its infloence is unirersal,
279 ; Heayen is based in the Chnreh,
ii, 5, 220; Angels and the Church
form one Man, 130 ; when the Chureh
comes to an end a new one is begun
among Gentiles, ii, 19 ; Churches
begin in Charity and end in Faith, 6.
Church, Ancient, began widi Noah:
its ruin depicted in the erection of
Babel, i, 327 ; originated in a rem-
nant of the Most Ancient Church,
341 ; spread yery widely mnrwM^g
Gentiles, 342 ; its genius altogether
diyerse from the Most Ancient, 348 ;
had no uniform creed or ritual, 348 ;
charity its essential, 343, ii, 21 ; the
study of the relations between the
Seen and the Unseen the delight of
its members, i, 344 ; symbolism, S45 ;
decline in the growth of self-loye
oyer neighbourly loye, 346 ; stupidity
accompanied selfishnew, Scnptaiea
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
665
neglected and gymbolB wonblpped,
and the Charoh consammated in
idolatry, 347 ; HelU of the Ancient
Church, 348 ; itsScriptarespreaerTed
in Tartary, ii, 58, 138
Chorch, first Christian, a scaffolding
for a nobler stmctare, i, 373; its
primitiTe peace, 374 ; its leaders
actuated by selMore, ii, 280; its
two periods, Nice and 1757, 565 ; its
eril distinctions of faith, and desola-
tion, i, 375 ; its sensual philosophy,
376 ; not a single genuine truth left
in it, ii, 572 ; badness of the Souls
it sends to the Spiritual World, i, 377 ;
dead and done for, ii, 20.
Church, the Most Ancient : rise
s]rmbolised in the story of Creation,
culmination in Adam and Etc in
Eden, decline in the eating of the
tree of the knowledge of good and
eril, and destruction in the deluge,
i, 327; the Pre- Adamites Hyed as
beasts, 327; the days of Creation
signify the deyeloperaent of the
Animal into the Man, 328; the
Adamites dwelt in tents in Osnaan,
dirided into houses, families, and
tribes, oared nothing for property,
and lired on Tegetable food, 329;
conTersed by the countenance more
than by Toice, and were utterly
sincere, 330; their internal respira-
tion, 330; the law was in their
hearts, they had no written Word,
but talked with the Lord face to
fkce, and with Angels, and were
instmcted in dreams and visions,
831, 465; their amasing wisdom,
831 ; the outer world to them a
rerelation of the inner, 832 ; had no
ceremonial worship, 833; their fidl
began in pride — ^in the notion of
independence, 888, ii, 112; maimer
of the fidl, I, 333-835; the fidl
gradual, 335; their final extinction
by suffocation, 336, 388 ; their Hells,
836 ; their Heavens, 338.
Church, the New, signified by the New
Jerusalem, ii, 20 ; hour arrived for
its establishment, 433 ; the crown of
all Churches, 566 ; it will endure for
ages and ages, 567 ; established by
the revelation of the Spiritual Sense
of the Word and by Swedenborg's
instruction in the Spiritual Worid,
572 ; its code of doctrine, 20, 433 ;
the doctrine of the Lord its chief
tenet, 115; views of the Angels
about its future, 18; Swedenborg
describes the process of its formation
to Beyer, 332; gives Tuxen its
earthly statistics, 507 ; says the time
of its establishment is unknown, 586 ;
his hopes concerning, 660; usually
raised up among Gentiles, i, 841,
470; few will enter it from the
former Church, 377 ; many of the
English will, U, 56; and Gstholics
before Protestants, 434.
Churches, Four, on Earth since
Creation, i, 373, ii, 564 ; a limping
analogy, i, 374 ; their history that of
Humanity, 381 ; their order and
decline, ii, 567, 571.
Cicero, ii, 135, 138; cooTcrses with
Swedenborg, 350.
Circumstances governed by character
in this worid and the next, i, 261,
425, 489.
CSvil Government, ii, 48.
avU Life, i, 480.
dapp, Otis, his Swedenborgian Bible,
ii, 53.
Clarke, James, on Swedenborg's diet,
ii, 576 n.
Clement XI. and the Bull Unigenitus,
ii, 449.
366
IXraX TO BOTH TMJCXEB.
i.450.
witk Geoige IL ia
178 : gms £SjOOO to tibe Swoieabofip
Society, fi,6»4;
to
Cloires, Rer. Jobs, cUef apcMtle cf
SwedeaborgisBisB, n, 5iM; birth sDd
d»4; atfint repelled by
Sweduiborg's writings^ 594; bis
»,5»5;
lUocbester, 596; traiisUtes Sweden-
borg, mud writes in bis defenee, 597 ;
is sammooed befive Biriiop Porteoos,
sod is dismiwiftd anhint, 597 ; goes
to London to adrise against Hind-
msrsh's sectarian dfwgns, 600; at-
tacked b J Proud, and regies, 609 ;
bis death, 622; character of his
writings, 622 ; niunber of his eon-
Terts, 622 ; defence of his position
in the EsUUished Chorch, 623;
sometimes preached firom a pew in
New Jerusalem Temples, 624 ; met
his adherents annoallj, 631 ; dis-
owned Noble's doctrine, 642; Angels
dictate his sermons, 645 ; lus expec-
tations concerning the New Church,
661 ; his inflaenoe (kr greater than
that of Hindmarah, 661.
Onmbra, Bishop of, ii, 425.
Cold Bath Fields, London, i, 224, ii,
574, 575.
Colenso, Bishop, i, 349, ii, 141.
Coleridge, ii, 168,508 ; on evil thoughts,
293; on Noble's Appeal, 614; ac-
quainted with Tulk, and offers to
write a Life of the Mind of Sweden-
I
Concafaiiiage, the intewmuae of a
basfaand with a barloi* 5. 415; two
kinds oC with a wife and ^nit fioni
a wife, 415; Talid reaMos far, 416;
a catalogue of sanctioos fiir, 416;
Conjngial LoTe does not
lawful Cfwmbinagc, 418.
places of the first meetings, n, 627-
628; distribution and statistica of its
Sodeties, 628-29 ; its hierarch j, 630;
its magazine, 631.
Confession maj be nsrful in self-ex-
amination, ii, 558.
Cbit/«^ Lo€t (DdiUt SafiemAm A
AwMrt Oot^mgiaii, dbcj pnfalisbed,
ii, 353 ; reriewed, 354-419; seiBed in
Sweden, 487.
Conjngial Lore : why etmjmgiai instead
of eomJMffal^ 0, 354; rare at this da j,
361, 386; in its essence the paasioQ
of Goodness for Truth, and of t^
Lord for His Churchy 361, 370;
holy, pure, and clean beyond every
other Lore, 361 ; firom its origin to
its last delights pure and holy, 371 ;
into it are collated every and tiM
most exquisite delights, which in-
crease to eternity, 361, 376, 377,
379 ; only exists with the RighbwMWt
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
667
862, 880, 407, 411 ; none will noelTe
it BftTO those whom the Lord leads
into the New Church, 407; im-
possible in Polygimy, 396.
Gonjagial Loto, an efflnx from the
Lord, ii, 880; a mental affection,
and to be at once separated from
and united with Sexual Love, 370 ;
both Lotos originate in Women and
are communicated by them to Men :
proved by experience, 374-376, 380,
881 ; Lore of Children originates in
Conjngial Love, 401 ; Children bom
of parents in Conjugpal Lore hare
a superior capacity for Heayen and
the Church, 378 ; the sense of touch
belongs to the Loye, 379.
Conscience, Its own register, i, 145;
not intuitive but acquiredfirom truths
learnt and practised, ii, 81 ; the
Wicked haye none, 31.
Consciousness, a momentary deriyation
from the in-dwelling of God in Man,
i, 169, 333, 425, 502; ii, 112, 200,
239, 247, 258 ; no eyidence of reality,
ii, 150, 153 ; Henry James on
Swedenborg's doctrine thereof, 654 ;
notes on, 666-668.
Contrition distinguished from Repent-
ance, ii, 555.
Conyention, General, of American
Swedenborgians, ii, 649; magaaine
and newspaper, 649; ecclesiastical
assumptions, 650 ; kicks dead sla-
Tery, 652 ; adversaries, 652.
Conversation by the countenance prac-
tised in the Most Ancient Church,
i, 330; and in Mars, 511; and
Jupiter, 512.
Cookworthy, William, translates Doc-
trine of lAfty ii, 479 ; and Heaoen
and He&, 592; visits Swedenborg,
683 ; his death-bed, 692.
Cbnmu, U, 671,
Councils, place no trost In, ii, 661 .
Cowper, i, 882 ; ti, 148, 837.
Cowherd, William, curate to CSowes :
sets up a Vegetarian Jemsalem, ii,
610; differs with Hindmaish : death
and epitaph, 611.
Correspondences, Sdence of, first In-
dicated, i, 192 ; everything in Nature
answers to something in Spirit, 269;
circumstances and character match
in the Spiritual Worid, 425; the
law illustrated by Carlyle, 489 ; the
Scriptures written according to the
Science, ii, 126 ; its laws set forth
in the Doctrine of Degprees, 210;
regarded by the Ancients as the
Science of Sciences, 497.
Crabbe's imaginary Swedenborg^ian, ii,
624.
Cramer on Swedenborg as a me-
tallurgist, i, 175.
Creation, originates in a Point, i, 91-92;
no more mysterious than cooking a
dumpling, 95; described, 158-178.
Creation, relation to the Creator, ii, 1 12 ;
does not proceed from nothing, bnt
from Gk)d, yet in Creation is nothing
of God, 198, 212, 465; between God
and His Work a Discrete degree, 21 1 1
Creation perpetual, 226 ; its variety
a reflection of the Infinite, 244 ; in-
comprehensible unless God is re-
garded as Substance and Form, 527 ;
Space and Time originate with
Creation, 532, 533 ; process of Crea-
tion, 534.
Creation summed up in Man : Nature
is Man in diffhsion : Man is Nature
concentrated and epitomised, ii, 201.
Criminals after execution, i, 408.
CHfit, Therh ^97 n.
Croker's BonoeU'a /oAfiMm, ii, 418 «.
Crompton, Roger, ii, 636.
Cromptoni Samiiel, ii, 618.
568
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Cromwell, Olirer, i, 183; attests w6
can only find God in Christ, ii, 205 ;
on conjugal Iots, 370 n.
Cono, John Christian, his Aatobio-
graph J, ii, 420; makes Swedenhorg's
acquaintance, 420 ; his opinion of
him, 421 ; notes concerning Ids
habits, 421-426; remonstrates with
him on the Brirf Eaeposiiion^ 444 ;
how Swedenborg receiyed his letter,
445 ; Cuno's spiritual stupidity, 445 ;
Bwedenborg's tender £uewell, 446 ;
Cuno finds Swedenborg busy on the
True Christian Bdiffion^ 509; snr-
prised that he should style himself,
Servant of the Lord Jesus Christ,
510 ; oonrersation on Familiar
Spirits, 51 1 ; finds him yery sociable,
521.
Currency, Swedenborg on, ii, 83.
D.BDALUS Htferbobeus, i, 47, 55.
Danes in the Last Judgement, ii, 8.
Darwin, Dr. i, 172 n.
Dayid, King, his lusts, i, 389; con-
spires to destroy Swedenborg, 390 ;
with Paul among the Lost, ii, 658,
664.
Vaum, They i, 197 n.
Dawson, Samuel, ii, 618.
Death, the dropping of a rent or worn-
out yesture : the Man survives, i, 1 43, |
258, 260, 262, 407, 434.
Decalogue, one table for God and one
for Man, ii, 149 ; reason of its nega-
tions, 147, 150 ; knowledge of uni-
yersally difitised, 276; why given
from Sinai, 546 ; a summary of the
Word and all religion, and contains
spiritual and celestial senses, 546.
Deductive Method condemned, i, 152-
153.
Degrees pervade Nature and is by them
interpreted, i, 127.
Degrees, CootiiniovB, or of Lalliaiii,
ii, 210 ; diwtingniabed
Degrees, 211, 218; and
where in combination with, S14.
Degrees, Di8crato,.or of Altitude, fi,
210; until now onkiftown. Sll ) ex-
amples o^ 211,218} tadatttwtrjwhun
in trines, 212.
De U Gardie, Count, married in HeaTen
to the Empress Kiiaabeth of BoHia,
ii,89.
Delft, Swedenborg's risiaB at, i, 204, 244.
Deluge, the, was the extinctioii of tiw
Most Ancient Church by sofibeatioii,
i, 336, and was confinod to its mem-
bers, 338.
De Morgan, Augustus, on Belief, ii, 171.
Depredati(m and jRite of tike JShoetSA
Currenqft h 70.
Descartes, i, 82, 97; Swedenboi^ a
Cartesian, ii, 84 ; Descartes appeara
to Swedenborg, ii, 468.
Des Guays, Le Boys, translator of
Swedenborg into French, ii, 646.
Despres, Rev. P. S., ii, 312 n.
Devil, the, why does God not kill him?
i, 17.
Devil, cast out by Bishop Svedberg, i,
25 i one set his palace on fire, 36.
Devil, defined, i, 477 ; is Self-LoTe,
486; hates all who do not fiivonr
him, 498 ; regards himself alone, ii,
263; there is no King Devil, nor
Devils who were once Angels : Devil
signifies Hell as to Will and Satan
as to Understanding, i, 497 ; all
Devils were once Men, 475, ii, 340 ;
Hell is based in Man, ii, 668 ; Devils
at home, i, 490 ; they like their
Hells : their sharpest pains arise
from the presence of Heaven, i, 490,
495, 503, ii, 495 ; ugly and ill-dressed,
but not in tlieir own eyes, i, 488,
492; each has his paramour, and
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
569
promiflciioiiB interoonne (hrbidden,
ii, 360, 408 ; are well worked, i, 500 ;
are atheists, 498; can understand
truths temporarily, ii, 177, 266 ;
Bwedenborg could converse with
them unscathed, 340; publishes a
communication from them, 299.
Derils, ungoremed would qaicklj
cease to be, ii, 289 ; subjects of Qod's
love, 537 ; His presence in them,
538-540; how utilized, 272 ; hitherto
neglected and persecuted: Henry
James, 273; easier to change a
serpent into a lamb than a Devil
into an Angel, 298.
Discovery of the Powere of VeeeeU hy
Mechanical Prindplee, i, 64.
Diseases orig^ate in Hell, ii, 339.
Disraeli, B., on the source of all ex-
cellence, i, 491 n.
Divine Love and Divine Wisdom {Sa-
pienUa Angeiiea de Divino Amore et
tie Divina Sapientia)^ reviewed, ii,
196-236; read in Heaven, 478;
translated into English by Dr.
Tucker, 202, 597.
Divine Providence (Sapientia Anffdiea
de Divina Provideniia)^ reviewed,
ii. 237-299 ; read in Heaven, 478 ;
translated by Dr. Tucker, 597.
Division of Money and Measures, a
Proposal for, i, 61.
Dixon, Capt, ii, 329-330.
Docks and Dykes, i, 64.
Docks, Sluices and Salt Works, i, 61.
Doctrine, the Scriptures interpreted by,
ii, 125; must be drawn from their
Literal Sense, 125; how true Doc-
trine is to be acquired, 128.
Doddridge, u, 669.
Dort, Council of, on Predestination, ii,
651.
Dragon, the, is Protestantism, ii, 811 ;
universaliaed, 311.
Dreams are from the World of Spirits,
i, 306 ; signification of, ii, 342.
Dresden, i, 77, 79.
Drysdale, Allan, ii, 630.
Dnch6, Rev. Jacob, ii, 600.
Dutch, reflections on, i, 114; in the
Last Judgement, ii, 8; in the
Spiritual World, 94.
Earth, the seminary of Heaven, i, 145;
produced frt)m the Sun, 159 ; creation
described, 159-161 ; reasons why the
Lord was bom on, 521-523.
Earthii, five, unnamed described, i, 528-
531.
East, always before the eyes of the
Angels, i, 427 ; frused in bed, 514; its
correspondence, ii, 208.
Eastcheap, London, Hindmarsh's Jeru-
salem in, ii, 601, 604, 605, 611 «.
Ecee Homo, quoted, ii, 657.
Ecclesiastical Qovemment, ii. 43.
Economy of the Animal Kinydom
{(Economia Segni AnimaUs), printed,
i, 120; the result of seven yean'
seareh for the Soul, 123; reviewed,
123-148 ; described by Emerson as
an honour to the huoian race, 180 ;
u, 103, 235.
Edwards, Jonathan, i, 175; ii, 677 ».
Education, last century depicted, i,
877 ; unspeakable importance of eariy
influences, ii, 189.
Edsardius of Hamburg, i, 6.
Effluvia, in ether, i, 138; blood
nourished frtwi, ii, 232.
Egyptians, performed real miracles in
rivalry with Moses, i, 850; deepest
magical HeUs consist of, 350; Bwe-
denborg offered to interpret their
Hieroglyphics, ii, 497.
Ekeblad, Count, ii, 829.
Ekebom, Dean, attacks Swedenborg»
Beyer and Rosen with virulenoe aai
2 P
670
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
stupidity, ii, 488, 491, 493, 495 ; ap-
parition of his Familiar Spirit, 612,
515 ; Swedenborg'8 manifeato against
Emesti applied to him also, 517.
Elberfield, Merchant of, ii, 91.
ElectiTe Affinities discussed, ii, 887-
890.
Elemental Kingdom defined, i, 85.
Elements, order and procession of, i,
90, 128, 129.
Elginbrodde, Martin, ii, 668.
Elie, ii, 447 n.
Elisha and his young man, i, 267.
Elizabeth, Empress, daughter of Peter
the Great, splendidly ministered to
in the World of Spirito, ii, 88; her
character, 88; her courtship and
marriage, 89 ; 450, 664.
Emerson, eulogpum on Swedenborg as
a man of science, i, 177-180; its
fancifalness, 180; on common-sense,
824 ; on Jewish ritualism, 365.
English, the, in the Spiritual World,
ii, 54-56 ; contrasted with ItalianB,
57, and with Germans, 97 ; their in-
difference to Swedenborg, 301, 478;
their Church midway between Rome
and Geneva, 428.
Enoch, editor of the Scriptures, i, 339.
Bnunciationa^ i, 339.
Epistles of the Apostles no part of the
Word, ii, 53.
Equilibrium, maintained between
Heaven and Hell, and the cause of
Man's freedom, i, 501-502, ii, 241 ;
fancifulness of the notion, ii, 554 ;
does not exist in individuals, i, 502.
Ernosti, Dr., appearance of his Fa-
miliar Spirit, ii, 512; lives near
Luther's tomb, 514; Swedenborg's
leaf against, 516; his notices of
Sweden borg's books, 516.
Krncstino counselled, ii, 631.
JiltpritUa'i LetUra, ii, 625.
JBtio^ and B€vkw§,^ 156 n.
Eternity as viewed by Angels, i, 430.
Ether, the third Element, i, 90, 92,
128; forms white blood, 135; em-
braces an ocean of saline and sul-
phurous effluvia, 138 ; lungs and skin
absorb it from the air, 138 ; was the
swaddling clothes of the young
planets, 160, and the aetiTe to the
passive earth, 161.
Euler, ii, 93 ».
Eunuchs, have no claim to chastity,
ii, 371 ; explanation of the Lord's
saying about, 371 n.
Eustachius, i, 125.
Eve, hatched from an egg and intro-
duced to Adam, i, 170-172; her
education, 171.
Eve, what her seduction by the serpent
signifies, i, 335 ; taken from Adam :
explanation of the allegory, ii, 368.
Evidences of Christianity, anecdote
concerning, i, 272 n.
Evil, punishes and then tends to abolish
itself, i, 306 ; began in Man's con-
firmation of the sensation of inde-
pendence, ii, 237 ; ascribed to Mao's
reception and effusion of the Divine,
5^3; unmitigated and simply per-
nicious does not exist, 287 ; small
compared with goodness, 285; re-
veals to us good, 564.
Evil denies God, ii, 137; the 'evil
heart of unbelief,' 174.
Evils permitted that they may be seen
and removed, ii, 269, 283-284.
Evil Thoughts from Hell, and we
ought not to credit ourselves with
them, i, 307, ii, 293.
Examination, Self, for repentance, ii,
34, 554 ; precedes the Holy Suppw,
37, 563; annual and semi->annual,
437; by the Decalogue, 507; dis-
credited and disliked by f^rotestaats,
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
671
654; a disease with some, 557 «;
confession may help to its praotioe,
558.
Experiencei the source of all know-
ledge, i, 84, 88, 153; how Swedenborg
exemplified the dictnm, 93, 126, 132,
152-153; the base of all ideas, ii,
524, and of imagination, 663.
External and Internal Man, ii, 23.
Faith in imputed righteousness un-
known to Swedenborg in childhood,
i, 15; he pronounces those happy
who can beliere Revelation without
consulting the intellect, 151, 187,
213 ; the relation of faith and works
discussed, 190-191.
Faithf Doctrine of^ (Doctrina Novte
ffierosolyma de Fide\ reviewed ii,
171-186.
Faith, defined, ii, 171 ; the result of
the congress of Goodness with Truth,
29, 186 ; he would acquire Faith
roust therefore be good, ii, 22, 23, 172,
174; the Good alone receive and
believe the Truth, 273, of which
they have an interior sense, and in
them Truths are multiplied, 173 ;
Knowledges the material of Faith,
178, which is much the same as Con-
science, 31 ; it ceases with Charity,
21 ; is not producible by miracles, i,
273 ; in its last analysis is axiomatic,
ii, ISO; blind and historical Faith,
181 ; the Angels utterly reject the
tenet, that we ought to believe what
we do not understand, i, 274, ii, 180 ;
Faith in Jesus Christ as God not to
be compassed by reasoning, but by
well-doing, ii, 547 ; true Faith illus-
trated in a conversation between a
Protestant and an Angel, 185.
Faith separated from Understanding
came in with Popery, ii, 181 ; Faith
without Charity in its nakedness,
182 ; Protestant Faith illustrated in
a conversation between a Solifidian
and an Angel, 184; trust in Faith
alone a universal tendency, 186.
Faith, Justification by, alone, the grand
dogma of Protestantism, ii, 429 ; its
prevalence in Reformed Christendom,
430 ; its incredibUity, 430 ; the dark-
ness it has induced, 433 ; permitted
to prevent pro£uiation, ii, 281; the
common people do not enter into its
mysteries, 281.
Faith, Professional, ii, 176-177, 266.
Familiar Spirits, ii, 511, 526.
Faraday, i, 96.
Fathers, the, cited in proof that the
Animal Spirits survive death, i, 144;
and Schoolmen exercised their in-
genuity on mystical senses of Scrip-
ture, ii, 670.
Feeling, the inversion of reality, i, 169,
ii, 112, 150, 153,298; corrected by
Revelation, i, 334, ii, 667.
Fell, Bishop of Oxford, i, 5.
Fenelon as Pope, ii, 274.
Ferelius, Rev. Arrid, Swedish Chaplain
in London : Swedenborg did not
wash for no dirt would stick to him,
ii, 843 ; pUgued with Evil Spirits
for ten days, 579; St. Peter with
him, 579 ; ignorant of the death of
his sister, 580 ; had no peace in
church, 581 ; his affability, 581
received the Holy Supper, 586
what passed at the ceremony, 587
Ferelius officiates at the funeral, 588
reports on Swedenborg to the Swedish
House of Clergy, 589.
Fetishism and Ritualism, ii, 652.
Fetter Lane, London: Swedenborg
lodges there with Brockmer, i, 219^
ii, 574; MoravUn Chapel, i, 219^
242.
2 p 2
IKDEX TO BOTH TOLDHBB.
raenhii^ Biakop, omum the Mkim
of CbtguffSal Lovt, fi, 4BT; hia
tnMihery, 487 ; likened hj Sweden-
harg to Jedu Isoariat, 488 ; pbta to
bare SwDdonboi^ oonfiiied u k mad-
nMn, 496. "^
Finch, IVanciB OliTer, > hevrenlj
ohaiaeter, ii, B40.
nnitet, Fint, prodnoed from Pdnta, f,
89, B3; oompoMthoSitiiaiidallflTe,
1S8.
Flnitaa, Second, pradoced ttma TiiM,
fcnn tbe Tint Element, 1, 90, 91,
118 ; Aninud SfitHi ooralst of,
185.
Flnitee, Third, produced flttm Seeoad,
ooaatltDtB the Sooond m Uagnallo
Element, I, 90, 93.
FInilaa, Fourth, produced from Third,
fcrm the third Element or Ether, i,
90,93.
FInitVH Fifth, prodvoed Ami F^nrth,
oeoipoee the Ftmrth Eleneiit or Air,
end in oloser oompieesion Water, I,
90,91.
Fire, Hell, i, 494.
Flre-worki, Biblioal, t, 464.
Flames appear to Swedenborg, i, 190,
Flamsteed, i, 32, 247.
Flazman, John, ii, 599 ; a member of
Proad's congregation, 607 ; flright-
ened awajr fay infernal aqnalls, 608 ;
defends Blake, 618 ; oonnectioii wiib
the Swedenborg Sodetj, C83; hia
angelic character, MO.
Fletcher of Modelj-, • reader and
admirer of Swedenborg, ii, 594.
iflorance riaited, i, 120.
Folkes, Martin, i, 247; Swedenborg
coKTemea with him and Sir Hans
Sloane, ii, 225.
Foreknowledge, woold take the teet
out of life, ii, 260) the desire for it
Iifrom evil, 261.
Kom not to be oonfomide<d wiib ^ape,
t, 4S1 ; Fonii ii application to Vae,
4M.
Fonn and Babetanoe, Qod ts «
■nd tbt orig^ of sH fl
FonicBtion, nputral; grierom as it
falctinos to Adulterona, and reniel aa
it inclinei to Conjugtal Lore, ii, 419;
witli Bume it is a necessity, 413; to
whom the keeping of > Mistress is
allowable, 413; sbe mast be neither
Unidea nor Wife, 413 ; the relation
. mnat be kept physical, 414; bettor
that the torch of loYotic lighted with
Fox, Qwrge, had no part in Quaker
•bonuiiaUoiiB, i, 888.
Ranee, exItfhi.'Uly uuited to Bome, hot
disunited, in many respeots, inter-
nally, ii, 449.
Vnitee, Swcdenborgisnisni in. ii,646.
F^Blciiiuaii Frinm prjyinj^, &t, and
Tdiipludui;, i, 116.
Frankiio, Benjamin, mkttjied by Swe-
denborg, i, 485 ; their difierenoe,
ii, 33.
Freedom, its origin, i, 425 ; is not
independence, ii, 652.
Frce-Will, ascribed to the eqoilibriam
between Heaven and Hell, !, 60! ;
derived from Ood, 602 ; a sensation :
no more, ii, 246.
Frederick Y. of Denmark, among the
Happy, ii, 507.
Frederick, LandgraTe of Hesse Caasel,
Eing of Swoden, i, 58 ; rongh treat-
ment by Bishop Syedberg, 69 ; a foul
adnlterar after death, MO.
Frederick the Great, i, 76 ; an admirer
of Wolf, 80; aeen in vuion, 237.
Frederick William of Praasia, !, 76;
persecntes Wolf, 80.
FTenob,Mn.,afe(ua]eDlogene8, Ii,630.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
573
Prere on orei^on, i, 172 «.
Fuller, Margaret, i, 324 ; ii, 653.
G^ifEB in Heayen, i, 474.
Garments of the Angels, i, 438.
Genealogies between Adam and Noah
factitious, i, 335.
General Laws, i, 276.
Generation, order of Man's, ii, 236;
odd notions about, 353.
Generation, Spontoneous, ii, 224; in
the Mental World, 673.
ChnesU, caps, i to xi, the fragment of
an older Word, i, 326; creation as
described therein incredible, 326 ; the
narrative neyertheless Divine to the
smallest ioU, 327 ; its inner meaning,
327-343.
Genevidve, St., i, 118, ii, 455.
Genoa visited, i, 120.
Gentiles, Swedenborg's experience o(
in the Spiritual World, i, 379 ; Chinese
repelled at the name of Christ, 380 ;
in Heaven, 468 ; man j better than
Christians, 469 ; illustrations of their
goodness, 470 ; the most intelligent
fh>m Africa, ii, 9 ; worship God as a
Man, 204; may all be saved, 276;
instructed after death, 277; use of
theirvarieties in the Grand Man, 277.
Gentiles and the New Church : a New
Church oommonlj raised among the
GentUes, !„ 841, 377, ii, 19 ; the New
Church will be formed among the
GentOes, i, 379 ; Swedenborg seemed
to forget these assertions, ii, 481 ; the
Doctrine of the New Choich dictated
bj Spirits in Central Africa, 483.
Gentleman, the Devil fast becoming,
and will one day be the perfect, ii,
274.
CfenOeman'a Magazine^ i, 48 n, 243, 247,
ii, 480 n.
Geology, Swedenborg's, i, 61, 68, 67.
Gwmetricians, impotence of, i, 96.
Geometry, explains the world, i, 85-86 ;
some things not explicable by, 86.
George II., i, 247 ; U, 328, 450, 664 ;
overhears iVom Heaven a oonver
sation between Swedenborg and some
English Bishops, ii^303; meeta 600
Clergy, 305; his earthly character
307.
Germans, in the Last Judgement, ii, 8;
in the Spiritual World, 96.
Germany, Swedenborgianism rare in
ii, 647.
Gnchrist»s Life of Wm. Blake, ii. 618,
640.
Gilpin, Rev. Joshua, ii, 600.
Girls* School in Heaven, i, 467.
Glen, James, ii, 600, 610 n; in Demerara,
619 ; sad experience of Negroes and
Indians, 619; opposed to the abolition
of slavery, 620.
Gnashing of Teeth, the contests of
Devils, heard outside Hell, i, 496.
God, as the Infinite, ii, 203 ; is incom-
prehensible, 527, 532 ; can be seen
by no Man nor Angel, i, 281 ; delirium
induced by thinking of His Infinity
from space and time, ii, 533.
God, is Love itself and Wisdom itself,
ii, 165, 196» 197, 242 ; in Him they
are one, 535.
God is Life itself, ii, 112, 196, 237, 535.
God is Substance itself and Form itself^
ti, 197, 216, 527.
Ood is very and essential Man, ii, 202 ;
He is the only Man, i, 328, 833 ; the
wiser the Angels grow the more
plainly they see He is Man, i, 424 ;
no other idea of God prevails through
the Heavens, ii, 204; He is wor-
shipped in a Human Form by the
Gentiles, ii, 8, 204 ; (nm the begin-
ning He was Man in first principles :
by tncamation He became Man in
574
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Ill; mlon He WM Man,
He ooaM not haTe eieeted the
UniTene snob as it U, 303.
Qed ms Oremtor, ii, 523; He oannoft
eieate Huneelf or breed gods, i, 243;
11,529,552; He oannot lore Him-
self , ii, 248 ; being lore He is bound
to creste mud lore what is moi Him-
self, 199 ; He sppeers as the Sun of
HeaTon, 207 ; He created the Uni-
Tene from Himsi^ by this Son,
534 ; jet there is nothing of Himself
in Cieaaon, ii, 198, 212; which is
dead, 200 ; Space and Time begin
with Creation, and are not in Him,
20e, 532, 533; to Him the ftitore
is present, and the present eternal,
297.
Ck)d is eTerywhere the same: He is
Taried as nttered hj created re-
ceirers, i, 279; ii, 201, 210, 537,
554, 553 ; erery created thing is a
recipient of Qod by oontigoity, not
continuity » ii, 212.
Qod in relation to Man: in himself
Man is dead, ii, 112 ; it is God's
passion to animate the Finite with
Himself, 244; He Tirifies Man by
His presence, 552; He is present
with eyery Man, Angel, and DctU :
without Him none could will or
think: piored by experiments in
the Spiritual World, 572; He is
the life of the Wicked, 286; His
presence in Hell, 537, 538, 539 ; He
gires Himself so unresenredly to
Man that he feels His Life as bis
own, 8, 201, 262 ; God alone acts :
Man Buflfers himself to be acted on,
and co-operates as of himself though
really fkwn God, 559 ; God dweUs as
Loire in Man's YnH, and as Wisdom
inhiaUDdentaiiding,i,ie9; ii,226;
haw nd l^sdom God's presence
in Man, 166^ 639, &V; M Qod ii
the only Man manhood ia tbe eri-
denoe of 1^ preaenoe, i, S28, 333;
whilst Qod Is Man's life Kan U not
Qod, and the idea tha^ He is diflhssd
in Men is an eaeerable berasj, fi,
199 200; Henry Jamos on ths
matter, 654 ; see aibo 666-IS68.
Qod in His ProTidenoe: His Omni-
potence cannot be understood vttil
it is known that He is Order, ii, 536 ;
the end of His Proridence is a
HeaTon out of the Homan Race,
242 : He nather curses, nor is an-
gry, 290; why He wiU not guide
Man outwardly, 252; He is eyer
resisting Man, 261; His gOTem-
ment of the Wicked, 286-287 ; He
is denied throughout H^ I, 498.
God as known to Man: He must be
seknowledged firom things finite, ii,
532 ; He conjoins Himself with
Men through finite appearances,
i, 282 ; thus He is seen by Angels
as their Sun, and sometimes in the
possession of an Angel, 283 ; He
made Himself known in Angels to
the Adamites, to Abraham, Hagar,
Lot, Gideon, Joshua, the Prophets,
and others, 283 ; and to Swedenborg,
284; to think of Him personally
is to think of Him materially, ii,
169 ; He is not to be serred person-
ally, but in His creatures, 549; a
right idea of €cod acquired firom the
true doctrine of the Trinity, 645;
with those who think of Him as
three persons He is little else than a
name, 524; unless He was one the
Uniyerse could not hare been crea-
ted, nor presenred, 525 ; the worship
of three persons leads to Atheism,
526; none of the four Churches
understood Qod aright: the New
IN0EX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
676
Chnroh will worship trnly the in-
visiblo in the risible Lord, 566.
G<5etlie, on heaTenly friendship, 1,
41 8 n; on coloars, ii, 59; his solita-
riness, 671.
Goldsmith, OliTer, i, 322, 882, ii, 478.
Goodness, the base of all Wisdom, i,
442 ; its uniTersal relations to Truth,
it, 22; confesses God, 137; lores
truths, 172, and multiplies them,
173 ; Goodnera is the Lord in Man,
288; erery Good has its opposite
Eril, i, 486 ; Good knows Evil, but
Eril knows not Good, ii, 408 ; how
a Man procures Goodness, ii, 187.
Gottenbnrg, Swedenborg sees a fire at
Stockholm from, ii, 61.
Gottenbnrg Oonsistorj, Swedenborg
attacked in, ii, 444 ; commanded to
render an account of his doctrines,
490; slow about it, 491.
Goremment in Hearen, i, 471.
Goremment of Hell, by the Lord and
His Angels, i, 498; the whip the
sceptre, 493.
Goremment, Ecclesiastical and Ciril,
ii, 43; has a right to repress im-
proper opinion, i, 81, ii, 45, 256.
Goyder, D. G., ii, 640fi.
Grace, the affection of Truth for its
own sake, ii, 174; Swedenborg
possessed it, 334.
Grand Man, Hearen is a, i, 419; a
plenary correspondence between
Hearen and Man, ii, 538; the
World of Spirits his stomach, ii, 7 ;
Angels and Men unite to constitute
him, 180; how direrse religions
contribute to his perfection, 277;
Kant on, ii, 72 ; Southey on, 626.
Greek Church, ii, 428; in error in
ascribing to God the communication
of the Holy Spirit, ii, 548.
Green, Mr., ii, 69 ».
Grills of Amsterdam, ii, 424.
Grinun, Baron, ii, 67.
Grindon, L. H., ii, 641.
Guillaume, an affected preacher, i, 118.
Guizot on the Bible, ii, 142.
Gustarus Adolphus, an adulterer, i,
401.
Gustarus Yasa, an idiot in Hell, i, 401.
Gyllenborg, Gount Frederick, trarela
with Swedenborg, i, 76.
Gyllenborg, Countess, Swedenborg's
wife in waiting for him in the
Spiritual World, ii, 500, 573.
Hallbrius, Bishop, brought to repent-
ance by Swedenborg, ii, 79.
Haller on the Animal Spirits, i, 182.
Halley, Edmund, i, 32, 60, 247.
Ham, signifies corrupt internal wor-
ship, i, 342.
Hamburg, risited, i, 199 ; iU inhabi-
tants in the Spiritual World, ii, 96.
Hamilton, Sir William, quoted, ii, 658.
Hampd, Dr. ii,481.
Hands, examined by Angels, i, 410.
Happiness : Who is happiest ? i, 451.
Hargrrore, John, ii, 627 a, 685 ».
Harl6, Anguste, ii, 646.
Harrison, Capt, u, 331.
Harrison, George, ii, 592 «; an able
lawyer, 620; translator of Sweden-
borg, 621 ; disowned by the Quakers,
621 ; his Life of Ck>wes, 622 n ; his
meetings at Hawkstone, 631.
Harrison, John, his chronometer, 1^
827.
Hart, E., Swedenborg's London printer,
i, 882, ii, 809 n; dies, and is seen in
the Spiritual Worid, 581.
Hartley's ribrations, i, 175, 176.
Hartley, Ber. Thomas, Swedenborg's
autobiographical letter to, i, 250, ii,
481; Wm. Law's letter to, 1,820;
conrerted to Swedenborg, il, 480;
576
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
tnumUi8eZ>0 Cbmmeroio, 480; toBti-
monj 0(»ioerning Swedoiborg, 480 ;
▼iaits him with Cookwortfay, 583,
with Memter, 564 ; addresBes to him
questions on the Trinity, 563 ; ne-
glects to see him in his last ilhiess,
586; revises. Gookworthy* 8 Heaven
and BeU, and dies, 592 ; introdooes
Bwedenb(Mrg*8 writings to Hooghton,
593.
Hats and Caps, Swedish political fac-
tions, ii, 81.
Hawkins, Isaac, ii, 593.
Hawkins, John Isaac, on the expnlsion
of Hindmarah from his own Jeru-
salem, ii, 603.
Hawkstone Pkrk, ii, 631.
Haworih, Adam, ii, 631 n.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, on the mystery
of evil, ii, 284 n.
Hazel, Baron, ii, 580 n.
Heart, derived from the Brain and re-
presents the Will, i, 418.
Heat corresponds to Lore, ii, 209,
217.
Heat, Vital, derived from the Spiritoal
Sun, ii, 228.
Heaven, the Lord is, i, 424, n, 34, 166,
243 ; is Love of the Lord and the
Neighbour, i, 451-452, ii, 38; aU
belong to Heaven who love goodness
and truth for their own sakes, i, 443 ;
character of the heavenly multitude,
i, 405.
Heaven, two Kingdoms of^ i, 417 ; di-
vided into three Heavens, 41 6f 418,
because in God there is a trinity, Ii,
213 ; characteristics of the third or
inmost Heaven, the seoond or middle
and the first or outmost, i, 417;
consists of innumerable Sodeties,
414 ; Heaven is a Qrand Man, and
each of its Sodeties a Man because
the Lord b Mu, 419-425, ii, 538 ; no
idea of God OuoaghcNtt Heaven 1«t
as of Man, &, 804; Mdi Aagd has
his place aoooidiii^ to his idea of
God, 545.
Heaven, the Lord appoaxs aa its Sn,
i, 426, to whloii the Angola oonatantfy
turn, 428; Timea and Seaaona tfwn^
428; DO fixed T1iiMa» 4S9; nor
Spaces, 431; HooMa, 4S2; Pslaees,
433 ; to grow old is to grow jomg
in Heaven, 436; Maciiagea, 4S6; a
wedding witnessed, fi, 353; Hnshaad
and Wifb are called one Angel, 378 ;
a Couple seen as one, 405; GelifaataB
dweQ on the sides of HeaTen, ii,
361; Garments of the Angeb, i,
438 ; their Power, 438 ; their Wis-
dom, 440; their Worship, 445 ; their
Innocence, 448; their Peace and
Happmess, 451 ; their felidtiea infi-
nite and indescribable, ii, 843 ; their
Language, 454; thdr Writings, 464;
all Infants go to Heaven, 466, and
constitute a third part of it, 468 ; «
Gentiles in, 468-471 ; Governments
of, 471 ; Employments in, 473 ; its
immensity, 475; its perfection in-
creases with numbers, 476; Cha-
racter the only passport to HeaTen,
477 ; not so di£3cult to qualify for
Heaven, 479*482; Rich enter as
easily as the Poor, 482.
Heaven, has Earth for its seminary, i,
145, ii, 4; based in man, i, 459, ii,
4 ; Angels and Men one Man, ii, 130 ;
their conjunction by the Word, i,
463; Heaven essential to Man's
life, ii, 291; Heaven cannot exist
apart from the Church, ii, 220 ; con-
sequences of this interdependence, i,
368, 380-381 ; the connection almost
broken when the Lord came, ii, 106.
Heaven and BeU {He Coelo et de
Infemo), reviewed, i, 405-505; not
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
577
drawn oat of Bwedenborg's Imiiif
ii, 662.
Heaven, diWded from Hell, ii, 266;
balanced bj Hell, i, 501, ii, 241;
goremfl Hell, ii, 287.
Heayens, whicb passed away at the
Last Judgement, 11, 7, 14; why
tolerated, 15-16.
Hebrew studied by Swedenborg, i, 249 ;
what fools some Hebraists are, 301 ;
Hebrew has some affinities with
angelio speech and writing, 456,
465.
Heemhutters, i, 883.
Hell, defined, i, 405, 486 ; is the Love
of Self and the World, 451-452, 491,
ii, 88 ; as mischievous is Belf-Love
out of service, ii, 554.
Hell, composed of as many Societies
as Heaven, 1, 486 ; three Hells
answer to the three Heavens, 487 ;
Hells everywhere beneath the Worid
of Spirito, 413, 487 ; Scenes and
Scenery of, 490; their Darkness,
493 ; their Light as of charcoal and
sulphur, 493 ; their Fires, 494 ; their
Stenches, 413 ; when opened fire and
smoke are seen emitted by the Angels,
495 ; how new Spirits are received in
Hdl, 496 ; Hell not horrible to its
inmates, 492; none sent shrieking
there, ii, 295 ; a hopeless Hell grown
incredible, 296 ; foolish to scold or
moan over it, 551, 553; as a whole
is called Satan and the Devil, i, 497 ;
abK) Adultery, ii, 408, 412.
Hell, based in Man, ii, 5; manifested
in Evil Uses, ii, 223 ; the origin of
all Diseases, 839 ; essential to Man's
life, 291 ; had grown supreme over
Man when the Lord came, 106;
turned to Use, i, 498, 500, ii, 272 ;
governed by Heaven, ii, 241, 287,
289 ; subject to God's k>ve, 587.
HeU-Fure is Self-Love, i, 495.
Herbert, Qeorge, quoted, i, 270.
Heresy, salvation possible under any,
ii, 282 ; every Heresy is a truth
exaggerated or incomplete, 623.
Herschel, Sir John, on realities and
appearances, i, 362.
Hesse-Darmstadt, Landgrave o^ cor-
respondence with Swedenborg, ii,
518-520.
Hessel. John, travels with Swedenborg,
i, 63, 67, 69, 201.
Hessel, Peter, i, 112.
Hessel, Sara, prompts Swedenborg to
suicide, i, 309.
Hieroglypkk Key ( CUxvUHierogljfpkiea)
i, 192.
Highs of Leigh, ii, 619.
Hill, Sev. W., translator of ApoeeHjfptU
ExpUeata, ii, 597.
Hindmarsh, James, ii, 593, 600; first
preacher in his son's Jerusalem, 601.
Hindmarsh, Robert, printer, ClerkeiH
well, London, tries to discredit
Mathesius, i, 225-227; prints Apo-
ealypni ExpUeatOf ii, 809 n ; meets
with Swedenborg's writings, in-
stantly perceives their heavenly
origin, and commences to proselytise,
598 ; holds meetings in New Court,
Middle Temple: list of some who
used to attend, 599; determines to
start a Church, 16 assemble in the
Poultry and baptise and receive the
Holy Supper, 600; a chapel opened
in Eastoheap, 601 ; a Priesthood
established by lottery which oasts
R. H. uppermost : his aoooont of the
transaction, 601 ; ordains his fkther
and Sam. Smith, 602 ; expelled firom
his Church for immoral opinions, 608 ;
his smart revenge, 604 ; holds a
Conference and draws up a constitii-
tion (or the New Jerusalem, 604 ;
578
IITDEX TO BOTH YOLUMES.
forges tho DiTiiie Name, 605; cIomb
his chapd, 606; fariogs Proad to
London, bat tibmj qnaivel, 607-606 ;
Buikfl into spiritiial indiflRBrence,
lemras his types, and turns stock-
jobber, 6t0, 637 ; pieacbes in Man-
Chester, 611; death and charaoter,
612 ; bb lottery and ordination pro-
nounced under 'tbe Diyine Auspices'
by the Swedenborgian Oonlerence,
628.
History, God revealed in, ii, 140 ; ex-
hanstire impossible, 140.
Hobbes, i, 332; quoted, 422, ii, 565fi.
Hodson, Capt, ii, 331.
Holiness in ignorance, ii, 666.
Holmfeld, Baron C Dirckinck, i, 197 »;
u, 73 ».
Holy Alliano^ ii, 613.
Holy Spirit, a ooosequenee of the
incarnation, fi, 107, 1 13 ; not a
Person, nor the Spirit of the Infinite
JehoTah, but the effluence from Jesus
Christ, 543; which is an arcanum
neyer before revealed to the world,
544 ; the Holy Spirit present with
every man, 572.
Holy Supper, sigpiiification and uses, ii,
37,563.
Hoogs, the Misses, ii, 424.
Hopes, bankers of Amsterdam, ii, 422,
424,588.
Hopken, Count, opinion of Sweden-
borg's services in the Diet, ii, 79 ;
selections ftom his letters, 84-86;
reveals to Swedenborg a conspiracy
agunst him, 495 ; remonstrates with
him on his spiritual stories, 570.
Home, Baron, executed, i, 403.
Horse, the, represents the Understand-
ing, ii, 50 ; in Greek mythology, 51 ;
paper on the correspondence sent to
the Stockholm Academy of Sciences,
497.
Hovghton, Kiohard, and Waslej, fi,
593, and Clowes, 594.
Haman Baoa will eadiOB lor eiw,
u, 4.
Humboldt, on bsnaa bsartj, 8» 9B5u,
Hume, David, i, 175.
Hume, Joseph, n, 616.
Hume, Miss M.C., L^^ 7UI^ ii,617.
Humility, the sdentifto reason te, ii,
668.
Hunt, Leigh, Ahom Bern Adkem^ ii, 169.
Husband and Wife, after deatii, ii, 360,
381; in Heaven are caOad one Angel,
377 ; together theyooosommatft Man,
378.
Hutohinsoaiarfsm, i, 813.
Hypoeiites, punished by euneamrota-
tion, i, 298; horrible appoaranoe o^
308 ; change most slowly in tiie
World of Spirits, 409; oaose tooth-
adM, 393, ii, 339.
Hypotheses, monsters ol^ bred ftom
synthesis or deductive reasoning, i,
153.
InotATRT, origin of, i, 347, fi, 497;
query as to the uni venal truth of the
statement, i, 347 n.
Ignorance the abode of boUnoas, ii,
666.
Illusions, induced by Spirits, i, 168;
fentasies are to Spirits as realitiea,
197 n; the Spiritual World the reabn
of, 532, it, 663.
Imagination, is not creation, bnt the
combination of ezperienoos, u, 663.
Immortality, derived ftom Qod's in-
dwelling, i, 143 ; Aristotle cited in
proof, 146.
Imputation : God imputes neither Good
nor Evil to Man, ii, 553; imputed
righteousness unknown in the Apos-
tolic Church, and nowhere declared
in the Word, 561.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
579
Incarnation, Divine, reasons for, ii,
540-541. SeelAtay,
Independence, an illasion, i, 169, ii,
247, 262; the prime fallacy of
human thought, ii, 112; the glory of
the Wicked, 294 ; how carefully the
Lord maintains Man^s sense of, 248,
259 ; the origin of all the errors of
the Church has been, that Men Utc
of themselves, 578.
Inductive Method commended, i, 152,
154.
Infants, all go to Heaven after death,
i, 466; are in themselves nothing
but Evil, 466; a girls' school, 467 ;
a third of Heaven from Infants,
468; children's games in Heaven,
474.
Infinite, the, cannot be geometrically
explored, i, 86; the Point mediates
between the Infinite and the Finite,
89; the Infinite the diffioolty of
philosophy, 99 ; the Finite — and the
philos<^her is finite— can make no
approach to it, 100; the Infinite
impossible in Nature, 101 ; a con-
fession of the Infinite extorted, 102,
103 ; philosopher and rustic equally
ignorant of the Infinite, 103; Nexus
between the Infinite and the Finite,
108; Jesus Christ pronounced that
Nexus f 104; Revelation resorted to
in perplexity, 104-106.
InfiniU, The (Pirodromui Fhiloeqpkia
JRatiodnofUit de InfinUo et Cauea
FinaU Oreatiami), written, i, 79;
reviewed, 98-105.
Infinite, the, ii, 203; imaged in the
variety of Creation, 244 ; finite things
receive and shew it forth, 534; in-
comprehensible, 531.
Influx, explained: a dangerous word,
ii, 166; all man has oomes by,
290.
Influx, Physieal, ii, 460; the hypo-
thesis of the Ma^rialist, 462.
Influx, Spiritual, ii, 460; adopted by
Swedenborg, 463; the hypothesis
stated, 463; igpiiorance, which he
removes, hinders its reception, and
for this end the Lord has opened his
spiritual eyes, 464; this Influx illus-
trated, 466.
Innocence, defined, 1, 448 ; in essence
is confidence in the Lord, 449 ; one
with Wisdom and the measure of
Heaven, 450; sweetness of its sphere,
451 ; the Lord b present in Infiuats
as Innocence, ii, 402.
Intdiechud BepoeUor^t described, ii,
631; its opinion of the English
Church, 631.
Intemperance, stink o( ii, 577.
IfUereaune between tke Soul and the
Bodjff a piece of materialism, i, 105 ;
advance on, 141, ii, 460.
Intercourse between ike JSoul and the
Body {De OommereiOt dbe.)^ reviewed,
ii, 460-477.
Intercourse with %iirits, its perils at
this day, i, 805, 461-462, ii, 519;
limited by the medium's memory,
i, 458-459; closed: 8wedenborg
declines to serve CoUin, ii, 345; ho
tells Ferelius anybody might eqjoy
it, 580 ; his testimony on this head
variable, 580 ».
Internal and External Man, ii, 28;
Internal Man is Mutual Love and
is the Lord, 160 ».
Intuitive Ideas, disowned by Sweden-
borg, ii, 135; contrary to experience,
136.
Inventory, a mysterious, ii, 678.
Invitatio ad Novam EeeMam^ ii, 572.
Ireland, chastity of its women, ii,
419 ; few Swedenborgiani in, 630.
Ireion, Bridge^ ii, 870 m.
580
IKDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Irving, Edwaidi quoted, i, 870 «,
872 », ii, 148; his audiences in Gross
Street, equalled by Pioud's, ii, 608 n.
Isaksson, Daniel, i, 1.
Italians compared with Englishmen,
ii, 57 ; Neapolitans the worst, 451.
Jaossoh, Andrew, ii, 274.
Jacob, the type of the Jews, i, 850 ;
explanation of his wrestling with an
Angel, 861 ; his serrioe for Baohel,
430.
■James, Henry, on God's Infinite Love
and Wisdom, ii, 199 ; lore's life an
eternal seeking, 848 ; the misuse of
the Devil, 878; the wickedness and
mischiefs of celibacy, 878 ; the hor-
rors and absurdities of thto orthodox
atonement, 488 ; glib confession of
rins at prayer meetings, 556; esti-
mate of Swedenborg, 658 ; himself
an original thinker, 653; Ustofsoine
of his books, 656fi.
James, St., on keeping and breaking
the Law, ii, 435.
Jansenists and Calvinism, ii, 428.
Japheth signifies tme external worship,
i, 342.
Jasher, Book of, i, 340, 350.
Jealousy, the anger of Gonjogial Love,
ii, 398 ; its varieties, good and bad,
398-401.
Jehovah, unknown to Abraham, i,
349 ; forgotten by the Israelites in
Egjrpt, 351 ; worshipped by them as
the greatest of gods, 351 ; was seen
by Moses as an ag^d bearded man,
and so thought of by the Jews, 352.
Jeremiah, describes the manner of his
inspiration, ii, 119.
Jemfeldt, killed by Charles XI., i, 12.
Jesuit, secretly an Atheist, ii, 411.
Jesuits and Arminianism, ii, 428.
Jesus Clirist, His Soul God, His Body
Mao, H, 108; If Ho be not God,
What Is God? 117; la Him we
worship God as Man, 805; the per-
fect exhibition of Dlvfaie Truth
under human conditions, 547.
Jews, Swedenborg, wishes to appear
as their Messiah, I, 882; two steal
his watch, 838.
Jews, the basest and moat sensnal of
mankind, I, 851, II, 104; for this
oaose chosen as the field of re-
demption, 870-72; Idolators, and
their worship of Jehovah idoAatrons,
i, 851, 866; ignorant of a liitnro
life, 852;ntter materialists, 863 ; In-
tense avarice, 858; oontempt for
other peoples, 854 ; cruelty, 856 ; In
what sense they were chosen, 856;
unique qualifications for a B^re-
sentative Church, 857, 867 ; expla-
nation of the destmetion of the
Canaanltes, 859; Ignorant of their
own symbolism, 865; this Ignonaoe
permitted toavert profimatlon, 866, II,
282 ; if converted scoff inwardly at
what they profess, i, 367 ; their pre-
ference of things to ideas, Ii, 142 ;
why polygamy was allowed among
them, 397.
Jews, in the Spiritual World, ii, 98;
case of one who could not believo
he had died, i, 407.
Jewish Church, began in Abraham,
extingoisbed in Egypt, i, 349, wholly
representative, 357, 362 ; rituals em-
braced the arcana of the Christian
Church, 364, peculiar use, 367;
abolished at the Lord's advent, 378.
Jewish History, the Word and holy in
every letter, i, 363; Grod and Heaven
revealed in it, 365 ; why chosen for
this purpose, ii, 139, 142.
Jezebel, ii, 312.
Job, Book of, ii, 53.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
581
John, St., OD the Divhie PrMenoe, i,
270 ; as politician, iJ, 274 ; Sweden-
horg spoke with him three times,
834.
Johnson, Dr., i, 32, 247, 382, u, 66,
418 n; on apparitions, i, 266; on
Wesley, ii, 686,
Jonbert, qnoted, ii, 669.
Jndas Iscariot, why chosen, ii, 276;
668.
Jndgement, effected on the Sonl by
itself, i, 144; in the World of Spirits
with cases, 409-411 ;
Jnpiter described, i, 611-616.
Justification by Faith is being made
Just by truth, ii, 436.
Kjlht, Inmianuel, i, 176, ii, 100, 469,
460 ; his story of Swedenborg*s
Tision of the fire at Stockholm firom
Gottenburg, ii, 61 ; story of the lost
receipt, 64 ; letter testifying to Swe-
denborg's clainroyance, 68 ; a wrong
date ascribed to this letter, 70, 73 ;
his Jealousy of Swedenborg finds
Tent in a pamphlet, 70 ; criticism of
Arcana CodesHa, 71 ; letter of re-
pentance, 73.
Kahl. Dr., ii, 600.
Kennicott, Dr., ii, 120.
Kepler, rortioea, i, 97.
Kingdoms of Heaven are two, i, 417 ;
appearance of the Sun in each,
426.
Kingsley, Rev. Charies, on Sweden-
borg's science, i, 180.
Klemming, Q. E., ii, 90, 673 ; discoTers
and prints Swedenborg's Drtamt^ i,
197.
Klopstock Tisits Swedenborg, ii, 608.
Knobloch, Charlotte, and Kant, ii, 68.
Knowledges, the material of Faith, fi,
178 ; supplied after death, 179; the
bases of ideas, 680.
Knox, Alexander, on Qnxendorf, i,
38611.
Konauw, Madame, has Swedenborg to
dinner, ii, 424.
Koran and the Bible, ii, 120.
Kryger entertains Swedenborg, i, 289.
Lackihotoh on the Swedenborglans,
ii, 626.
Lamb, Charles, ii, 66.
Lancisi, i, 126.
Language of Heaven, i, 6 ; a uniTersal
speech, 464 ; its mode and expressive-
ness, 466; has nothing in common
with human speech, 466.
Language of Devils affects Angels as
a stench, i, 466.
La JNouveUe Jinualem, ii, 646.
Laplace, i, 96.
Loii Judgement (De UUimo Judieio)^
reviewed, ii, 3-19.
Lati Judgement J Continuation of (Om-
Unuatio de UUimo Judido) reviewed,
ii, 191-196.
Last Judgement, near at hand, i, 877 ;
took place, 1767; its scene the
World of Spirits, ii, 2-4 ; witnessed
by Swedenborg, 7, 666 ; former
Judgements, 8; judgement of Ifa-
hometans and Gentiles, 8 ; of Catho-
lics, 12; of ProtesUnts, 14, 191;
results, 16-19 ; predominance of Hell
over Heaven altogether destroyed,
116; the story repeated in the ex-
positions of the Apocalypse, 811.
Lavater, writes to Swedenborg, ii,
466; again, 468; read and profited
by his writings, 469.
Law, William, i, 312; ii,669; ophiion
of Areana CceUetia, i, 820.
Leavitt, Samuel, on intercourse with
Spirits, i, 462.
Leeuwenhoek, i, 126, 186 ; after death,
ii,96.
682.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMBB.
IiBibiifti» i, 40, 8S, 91; tt, 461, 669;
after death, ii, 476.
Leslie, paioter, ii, 898.
LencxjnBki, Maria, Qaeen of Franoe,
U, 424.
Levd of Ae 89a and great TUkiofthe
AneieiU World, i, 61.
Lewes, O. H., quoted, i, 418 n; mia-
vepresents Kant, ii, 74 ; on the per-
petnalness of Creation, S96 ; on the
emallnesB of Evil, 286; on Pre-
EetaUiehed Harmonj, 461.
Lewis, John, i, 882; ii, 809n, 678;
pahlishes Aremia OedeiHa, i, 810;
his advertisement of, 811-819.
Lewis, Mrs^ thinks Swedenhoig too
apt to spiritoaliae, i, 883; on his
diet, ii, 676 «.
Liberty, derived from God, i, 888; ii,
S89, 247 ; app&sn to be Man's^ i,
884; but has no Talidity beyond
sensation, ii, 247 ; is the freedom of
LoTe, and Tarloas as Love, ii, 82,
245, 246 ; its double origin in Qod
and the equilibrium of Heaven and
HeU, i, 501; ii, 241, 554; God's
care of Man's seme d Liberty, ii,
252.
Life, Doctrine of {Doetrina Vita, cfec,),
reviewed, ii, 144-151.
Life, cannot be created, i, 148 ; God is
Life, 146; ii, 654, 666; Man has
none in himself, ii, 112; Life is
Love, 24, 196 ; God alone acts : Man
is acted on, and re-acts <u of himself,
659 ; the errors of the Church all
spring from the notion that Men
live of themselves, 573.
Light, intensity in Heaven, i, 262 ;
its modifications there, 426; corre-
sponds to wisdom, ii, 209, 217.
Lindgreo, ii, 588.
Lindsey, Theophilus, i, 388, 391.
Linnnus and Swedenborg, ii, 861.
Lltonl 001186 of the Wofd, tbe cnrdo^
of the higher Benaes, ii, 124 ; ocm-
tiaiia Divfaie Truth in ita Mness,
holiness, and power, 124; Doctrine
must be drawn from and oonflimed
by it, 124; aooommodated to the
Sensual Man, 126 ; a fisiioe agaSnst
profimation, 180.
Loeke, i, 180.
London in 1710, i, 81; in 1744-45, 247;
in the Spiritual Worid, ii, 56.
Longitude, xewardsofibredibrdiflQOTery
of, i, 46, ti, 827.
Limgitude, Nmo MMua qf FiMX^g Jtg
Lunar Gbeervatiom, i, 82, 84^ 60,
64, 66, ii, 808, 827.
Lord, Doetrine qf (Doetnna Ifoem
JBieroeo^fwuB de Doadno) reviewed
ii, 108-117.
Lord, the, the Redeemer, fi» 540; the
whde Soripturaa treat of Him, i,
868, ii, 108 ; assumed humanity to
reaoh Evil, ii, 640; passed Uiroogk
all stages of growth, 543; why bom
on this Earth, i, 521 ; came to reduce
Heaven and Earth to order by com-
bats against the Hells, ii, 105 ; the
two purposes of His advent, 106;
assumed humanity in its worst form,
i, 370 ; gradually put off the body
from Mary until God stood revealed,
i, 371, ii, 108, 543; expUnation of
His double consciousness, ii, 111,-
peculiarity of His resurrection, 110;
the Holy Spirit the result of the
incarnation, 113, 543.
Lord, the, is Heaven, i, 424, u, 243 ;
its sun, i, 426; interiorly, the Angels
think of Him as in themselves, ii,
209 ; cannot send forth anything
from Himself: can only give Himself,
166 ; love of Him is not love of His
person, i, 425; He is the Neighbour,
ii, 549, and as such is found in parent,
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
583
hosband, wife, child, friend, and
coantry, 408 ; He hides Himself, ii,
258, leads Man as if Man led himself,
269-261 ; fights for him, and gires
him to feel the combat as his own,
160, 163.
loais XIY., i, 88, U, 684 ; In Hearen,
ii, 449.
lioaisa Ulrika, Queen of Sweden, sister
of Frederick the Great: Swedenborg
gires her a message from her de-
ceased brother, ii, 64; her belief and
unbelief, 66; Swedenborg tells her
he can only conTerse with Spirits of
whom he can form an idea, 67.
Loutherboorg, ii, 699, 618.
LoTo: God is Lore itself, ii, 197; Lore
is Life, 196; Lore and Wisdom in-
separable; Lore only known in
Wisdom; and Substance and Form
in themselves, 197, 686; Lore repre-
sented by the Heart, 228 ; Man's
three Lores: their order and sub-
ordination, ii, 24-26, 648, 650.
Love of approbation, ii, 24 ; conduct of
those mored by it, 161.
Lore of Children, deriyed from Con-
Jugial Love, ii, 401 ; in the E^ll,
402 ; inspired into Men by Women,
402 ; difference between the affoction
in the Spiritual and die Natnxml, 408.
LoTe of Dominion : he who subdues It
easily subdues other EtU Lotos, for
it is their head, ii, 267.
Lore of Gain, conduct of those goremed
by, ii, 162.
Lore and Liberty are one, Ii, 245 ; as
many sorts of Liberty as of Lore,
246.
LoTe of the Lord, defined and ex-
plained, u, 166-170; is the Lore of
goodness and truth, 1, 426; indicates
the Neighbour, Ii, 27 ; Is not piety,
80.
Lore and Lost, a reriew, 11, 864-419.
Lore of the Neighbour: he who on
Earth lores him as himself will In
Heaven love him better than self,
i, 306 ; the Lord is the Neighbour,
ii, 649; in the righteous ezecutioii
of all business Is the true Lore, Ii,
27, 28, 144. Ae Charity.
Lore of Pleasure, conduct of thoae
goremed by, it, 162.
Lore, the Ruling, determines for
Hearen or Hell, i, 406, ii, 24, 80;
gives Man his quality, ii, 231 ; re*
garded by the Lord mainly, 871.
Lore of Self, is not In God, wherefcra
He creates that He may lore what
is not Himseli; il, 199; its use, 240;
is supreme in all bom at this day,
146, 668 ; its ezcessire delights, 272 ;
its madness and blindness, i, 498;
its prodigious force not lost, ii, 668,
but made useftil, 272; subdued by
Divine Love, 147, 256; its appro-
priation of Good and Evil, 289; ita
atheism, i, 498, ii, 136; denies
Ftovidenoe and attributes all to
Prudence, ii, 263; thp origin of
Popery, 279; simulates piety, 146,
and charity, 161 ; advocates trath,
176; gives abad life, 144; iU liberty
provokes constant war, 82; displayed
in Hell, I, 491, 495 ; it Is the worm
which dieth not, ii, 26, and the
Devil, 288.
Love of Trath for its own sake la
Divine Grace, ii, 174.
Love of the World, ii, 24, 26, 27; ita
right place and use, 648; displayed
lu HeU, i, 491.
Loyola, ii, 453.
LUbeck, Bishop of, ii, 89.
Lundatedt, Swedenborg's sister, death
of, ii, 680.
Ijuiga, saok ether frcm air for white
cnwx TO tr/rm ^oixjeb.
lii^fAMrAUi'^ O«0ff)|Br fw^tii, m,%f^m,
fenmiUi mmfm% tttem 9SfJ; iSbar
MttHm, Witlkm, tteU op m Swcdoi-
Umni (M k tery Mm, ii, Vn; ma
MMilMiod U Hi* pfe»esee in w, i, 328,
jBf9]^ $ MMij (ktffdnetm or Wisdom in os
l« fU in M, i, 1i|0, 27$, ii, 699 ; in
imrn^'Ainm we ftre 4e«d, nnd are ririiled
lif (M, H, 200, 237, 236, 2216, 465 ;
i)M lfit«m«l M«n in the Lord, 150 n.
if w« WnnA tif (mttmUm we nboold be
OMa, 20(; ; thin rclAiirm between God
und M«n In vol red In all Religioni,
tmt fitni phUoflKiphicallj NUtad bj
Mwndeniiorg, fAT,
Mhu, ih#) ^mm«rj of AnInuUe, 1, 123,
Vin ; ttie epitome of Cre*tion, 268,
%m \ Nftttire U M«n In dUTofion, H,
90t, 9911 ootblng In tlio Uniraaw
I
kk
Manyat, Hefner,
nboot BnrfAnbnrg, n« 76 ;
boose, 337.
Mnrv, deaeribed, i, 610.
MarteriDe, Ifadaae, aaaktod
a lost reeeipi bj Wirr<fc»bnrjj^ S, 63.
Martjia,!, 301.
Ifarj, Virgin, tbe bodj ^e Lord
assomed from ber was an epttoaae of
Jodaasm, i, 970, n, 104; it ww «
eoncentmtioD of all Eril, aad in
affiliation witb erery H^ ii, 106;
it was dispersed aad replaced by
Deity, i, 371, ii, 43, 108; explanation
of tbeSavioar'sdoobleoooscioosnesa,
ii, 112 ; He declined to acknowledge
Mary as His Ifotber, ii, 109 n ; oot
of the ontnith tbat He waa her son
spring lodaiim, Arianism,
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
585
ism, Calvinism, and Natondism,
542 ; Mary the first figure in the
Roman pantheon, 434 ; Swedenborg
has an interview with her, it, 110.
Mason, William, life and character, ii,
615 ; contempt for Hindman*h*s
hierarchy, 602 n; controversy with
Noble, 642.
Masorites, ii, 119.
Masson, David, ii, 73 n.
Mather, Ralph, ii, 605.
Matheslos, Rev. Aron, i, 220, ii, 586 ;
his account of Swedenborg's mental
derangement, 225; refutation of
Bwedenborgian slanders against him,
230-232.
Mauritius, ii, 646.
Manini on Conscience, ii, 81 n.
Mechanism, the world a system of, i,
85,86; the Soul subject to the laws
of, 106, 108.
Mechanism of the Intercourse between
the Soul at%d the Body (De Me-
ehanismo Operatiomg AninwB et
Corporis)^ reviewed, i, 105; an ad-
vance upon, 141.
Mediums: how Spirits would make
Men their mediums, i, 298; they
directed Bwedenborg's hand, 293; one
thanked him for what he had written
as his own, 300 ; others led him, saw
through his eyes, and heard through
his ears, 304.
Megret, i, 56.
Melancholy originates in Spirits who
luxuriate in corrupting food in the
stomach, ii, 577.
Melancthon, ii, 429, 572 ; Swedenborg's
acquaintance with, 438.
Melle, Jacob, a eavatU of Liibeck, i,
63.
Memorabilia : See Spiritual Stories.
Memory, without Understanding of no
account after death, i, 301, 443, 514 ;
ikte of book- worms, 292; learned
stupidity, 443; memory indelible,
judgement effected from, books com-
piled from, 409-41 1 ; case of Charies
XII., 398 ; Angels use Man's when
in intercourse with him, 457.
Mercury described, i, 507.
Merit, b theft, i, 425 ; disowned by the
Good, ii, 32, 550 ; Man has none in
his regeneration and salvation, 149,
150; absurdity of imputed Merit,
182 ; Man ought to disown Merit and
Blame alike ; the first he has firom
God, the second from Hell, 289, 292 ;
how Swedenborg acte^ i, 307, ii,
292.
Messiah, Swedenborg calls himself, i,
222 ; sUtement contradicted, 229 ;
possible explanation, 285.
Messiter, Dr. ii, 479, 480 n, 584.
Metaphysics, commonly fantasies, i,
294 ; Swedenborg hated, ii, 85.
Micah and his image, 1 , 470.
Milk, eigoyed by Spiritual Angels, i,
296.
Mill, J. Stuart, on the negations of
Christianity, ii, 147 ; on judgement
of doctrine, 434, 669.
Milton, on the relation of woman to
man, ii, 363.
Mind, consists of Will and Under-
sUnding, ii, 23, 226 ; explained by
the Body, 227, 467, 668; a form
organized from spiritual substaooes,
535.
Biinerals condensed from Water, i, 92,
ICl.
Miracles, importance of as proofs, i,
271, or for regeneration, ii, 253,
Catholic miracles impostures, ii, 520.
MUceOaneoue OburvaHone^ i, 67.
Mistresses, kept, sanctioned, ii, 413 ;
Swedenborg's, i, 75, 121 ; U, 505.
Misers after death, i, 292.
2 g
586
IKDBX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Miaslonary and Tnet Society, ii, 688.
Money, ill-gotten, i, 298.
Monks and Nans after death, ii, 880.
Monogamy, favoured by women, poly-
gamy by men, ii, 892; Conjngial
LoTe only possible in, 396.
Monster, Hell a, i, 488; one at each
gate of Hell, 489.
Moon described, i, 517.
Moral Life, i, 480.
Morayians in Fetter Lane, London, i,
219; Swedenborg mingles with them,
221, and wathn mischief, 242 ; de-
scription ,of them after death, 883 ;
ii, 664.
Morton, Lord, ii, 827.
Moscow, Swedenborgians in, ii, 646.
Moses, saw Jehorah as an aged bearded
man, i, 352 ; in Cheapride, London,
888, Swedenborg once spoke with,
ii, 884.
Motion derived firom the Point: an
everlasting spiral, i, 89; rotatory,
sphral, and vertical, 140.
Motion of Earth and Planets^ i, 60.
MouraviefT, Alexander, ii, 646.
Mnggleton and Reeves ii, 626.
Malatto, unknown to Swedenborg, ii,
353.
Masic, little noticed by Swedenborg,
ii, 337.
Masscbenbroek, his experiments adopt-
ed by Swedenborg, i, 91 .
Mystical Senses of Scripture, a plague,
ii, 670.
Napoleon, Louis, ii, 274.
National Missionary Institution, ii,
633.
Natural World, exists from the Spiritual
World i, 259, and neither could exist
alone, ii, 219; is a picture of the
invisible, i, 332.
Nature, everywhere the same, size
OMkai no dUBHreaoe, 1, S5, 96, 179,
420 ; only a wwd fot uie fioiroea ftwn
the Infinite, 88; orlginalea in a
Point, 80; mdntdHgfble witinrnt a
knowledge of seriea, order, and
degrees, 127, 128; merely the inrtm-
ment of Life, 146 ; exists instantly
from God, 277 ; is Man In diAMioB,
ii, 201, 212, 221, 525
Neapolitans, il, 451.
Nebular Hypothesis, i, 96, 159.
Neighbonr, is the Lord, ii, 168, 549;
varieties of, i, 154, Ii, 549.
Neptane, unknown to Swedenborg, i,
519.
Neptune, signification in mythology,
ii, 51.
Nerves, ooodolts for Animal Spirits,
i, 132, 189.
Ifmo CkmrA Iftdtipeiidad, ii, 662.
Neno Jenualem and iU JBeavemig Ike-
trine {De Nova HieromAjfrna ef ^fst
Doeirifia CbbUsU) reviewed, H, 20-48.
New Jerosalem, signifies a New€!harch,
ii, 20 ; humble expectations con-
cerning, 16; will endure for ages
and ag^s, 567 ; few will enter it from
the former Church, i, 377; will be
raised up among Gentiles, 373, ii, 482 ;
its truths diffused in Africa, li, 483.
New Jerusalem Church Tract Society,
ii, 633.
New Jerusalem Magazine^ i? 231 , ii, 632,
New Jerusalem Ma ffozine, Boston, ii, 649.
New Jerusalem Messenger, New York,
i, 228 a; ii, 649.
New Rules for Maintaining Heal in
JRooms, i, 67.
Newton, Sir Isaac, i, 32, 97, 247;
Swedenborg discusses with him on a
Vacuum and Colours, ii, 58.
Nexus between Infinite and Finite, i,
104.
Nice, Council of, first broached the
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
687
doctrine of three Gods, ii, 544 ; its
creed made God the aathor of Evil,
551 ; no one admitted to temptation
since, 560 ; doctrine of imputed
righteousness originated at, 561 ;
completed the first period of the
Christian Church, 565.
Noah, signifies the Ancient Church,
i, 341.
Noble, Samuel, his malicious treatment
of Mathesius, i, 230-231 ; statement
about Proud'fl audiences, ii, 608 n;
his conversion and character, 613-
614; his Appeal, i, 230 h, ii, 614,
615 n; discord in his Society, 639;
accuses Tulk of heresy, and in turn
is accused himself, 642 ; his contro-
versy with Mason, 643 ; Spirits rap
in his study, 645.
Noorthouck, ii, 574.
Nordberg's History of Charles XII., i,
46 n.
Nordenskjold, Aug^stiis, his list of
Swedenborg's Bibles, ii, 344 n ; ex-
pelled from the Eastcheap Jerusalem ,
603.
North, correspondence of, ii. 208.
Nourse, London bookseller, i, 243, 247,
813,314.
Nuns after death, ii, 360.
Oberuv, on the order of the Heavens,
i, 418; attests Swedenborg*s ex-
perience, ii, 646.
Observations and Discoveries respecting
Iron and Fire, i, 64, 66.
Oetinger, Bishop of Murrhard, trans-
lates Swedenborg into German, ii,
333; corresponds with Swedenborg,
333, and forbidden to entertain him,
334; has many doubts about the
new doctrine, 335.
Okely, Rev. Francis, confirms Brock-
mer and Mathesius, i, 227, 228 «;
visits Swedenborg and writes to
Wesley, ii, 582.
Oiiphaut, Mrs., 1, 370 n, 372 n; ii,
142 ft; her Salem ChapeitL fair pic-
ture of a Swedenborgian congregm*
tion, 638.
OlofiM>hn, Olof, death foretold by
Swedenborg, ii, 75.
Oldenburg, Kings of the House of,
in Heaven, ii, 508.
Omnipotence and Omnipresenoeof God,
ii, 536-540.
Opera PhUosophioaet MinerdUa, printed
at Leipsic, i, 79; cost defirajred by
Duke of Brunswick, 82 ; three folios
— two devoted to iron and copper,
and one to philosophy, 84; puUioa-
tion of trade secrets defended, 83 ;
account of the Prineipia, 84-97 ;
placed in the Indtx Expurgaiorius,
119; metallurgical parts reprinted
and their merits confessed, 175.
Opie, painter, ii, 592.
Oppoeites excite sensation, i, 486; ii,
565.
Order, pervades the Universe, i, 127 ;
God is Order, and He cannot act
against Himself, ii, 297, 536, 542.
Orlov, Count, ii, 87.
OronoskuD, ii, 88.
Painb, Thomas, ii, 18, 168.
Palmerston, on dirt, ii, 554.
Pantheism, an execrable heresy, ii,
199; reason shrinks from it witii
horror, 258.
Papkc, i, 40.
Paris, Swedenborg lives there a year,
1712, i, 33; revisited for eighteen
months, 1736, 116; a mysterioos
visit, 17C9, ii, 447, 459.
Paris, the Abb6, ii, 520.
Parker, Theodore, on Swedenborgiani,
ii, 651, 659.
2 Q 2
588
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Pascal, ii, 74.
PasBires and Actires, i, 90.
Paton, J. Noel, u, 630.
Patriotism, ii, 158 n.
Paul, St.f in Cheapside, i, 391, also ii,
93 ; Swedenborg's sad experience of
him, 891-893; explanation of his
character, ii, 280; his Epistles no
part of the Word, 53 ; not once cited
in Arcana CoeUstia or Apocalypse
Explainedf 823; Swedenborg ex-
plains the omission, 324-326 ; begins
to quote him, 129, 144 n, 323 ; spoke
with him a whole year, 334 ; g^res
him toothache, 838 ; among the Lost,
658, 664.
Paul, St., on Society as a Man, i, 423 ;
on the relation of Woman to Man,
ii, 363 ; thrice on one Sunday, 326 n.
Pegasus, ii, 52.
Penn, William, i, 888.
Penny, Stephen, i, 311, ii, 478; reads
Arcana Coelettia, i, 312 ; writes to
William Law, 320.
Percy, Dr., on Swedenborg as a me-
tallurgist, i, 175.
Permission, Laws of, ii, 269.
Person, the Lord not loved as to, i,
425, ii, 169 ; Angels think abstract-
edly from Person, ii, 133, 169.
Personality, our sense of, derived from
God, i, 333, 425, 502, ii, 112, 239.
Peter the Great and the Russians, ii,
91.
Peter III., Swedenborg announces his
death in Amsterdam, ii, 87.
Peter's Keys, ii, 821.
Peter, St, contemned by St. Paul,
f, 393; visits Swedenborg, ii, 93,
579.
Phillips, James, Quaker bookseller, ii,
592.
Phrenology, i; 299, ii, 236, 290,401,
658.
Physiognoiny practised by Ang^ I,
410.
Pietism in Sweden, i, 11, 12, 7L
Piety, associated with rioe, i, 299;
difficult, 479; in some forms mis-
chievous, 482; leads away /rem
Heaven as much as it is oommonly
believed to lead to it, 485 ; defined,
ii, 80 ; its duties, 168.
Pindar, Peter, ii, 592.
Pitman, Isaac, ii, 641.
Flanett and their Pecple (De TeOwrUnu,
(ke.)f reviewed, i, 506^3; credibility
of the tales, ii, 664.
Plants, seven, bom from the Son, i,
1 60 ; the seventh absurdly supposed to
be Uranus, 160 n, 518.
Plants, created, i, 162; Animals ere-
ated from by Spiritual Sun, 163.
Poet's function defined, ii, 662.
Points, produced immediately from the
Infinite, and the beginning of Crea-
tion, i, 89; their wonderful quali-
ties, 92, 93 ; compose the first anb-
stance, 128; the theory repudiated,
94, 95 ; ii, 215.
Polhem, Chistopher, i, 39 ; introduced
to Swedenborg, 47 ; takes him to
see Charles XII., 48 ; dies and
witnesses his funeral through
Swedenborg's eyes, 393 ; his sad
state, 394.
Polhem, Emerentia, would not marry
Swedenborg, i, 52 ; he confesses she
would not have him, 121 ; appears
to him after death, ii, 500.
Polonius, i, 182.
Polygamy, favoured by men, ii, 392 ;
cannot co-exist with Christianity,
396 ; why allowed among Jews and
Mahometans, 279, 897 ; Africans on,
482.
Pombal, ii, 425.
Popery, Swedenborg's indictment of.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
589
it, 9 ; denoanoed by him in the Diet,
81 ; originated in Self -Lore, 279-
280.
Popes gorerned by Sirens, ii, 451.
Poppin*s Coort, London, i, 382, ii,
809 j», 581.
Porteous, Bishop, on George II., ii,
307 ; finds no harm in Clowes, 697.
Porthan, U, 346 ii.
Portuguese Jews, ii, 99.
Poverty, dangeroas as riches, i, 480;
evil character of many Poor, 483.
Powers, Hiram, ii, 641.
Prague, i, 78.
IVayer, i, 116; effects nothing unless
AS means to reformation, 303 ; the
Lord has no need of: He desires it
for Man's sake, ii, 30, 168; is con-
verse with God, 162.
Prayer Book and belief, ii, 176.
Predestination, misuse of the word,
ii, 295 ; a horrible doctrine, 551.
Pre- Established Harmony, ii, 460;
described by Mr. Lewes, 461 ;
Swedenborg's dissent from, 462.
Pride, of independence a deadly
delusion, i, 169; the mother eril of
human nature, 333.
Priestley, Dr., criticises Sweden-
borgianism, ii, 606 ; answered by
Hindmarsh, 607.
Prince's Square Chapel, London,
Swedenborg's tomb, ii, 588.
iVinet/yui, or the Firtt PrmapU$ of
Katwral Thinff§, being New Attempts
towards a pkUosopkical explanatUm
of the Elementary World reviewed,
i, 84 ; renunciation of its theory of
Creation, ii, 527-528; notes on it,
215, 423, 662, 665.
Profimation, the most dreadAil of
calamities, i, 867; various degrees
of, ii, 267 ; fearful lot of proAuiers,
268.
Protestantism, Paul its favourite, ii,
826 ; inherits the aficctic curse, 374 ;
its doctrine identical with Catholi-
cism before the Reformation, ex-
cepting the conjunction of Faith
with Good Works, 427 ; and gains no
entrance to the Understanding, 430;
the dogmas it shares with Catho-
licism deeply erroneous, 431 ; three
gods worshipped, 431 ; Adam's sin
and Christ's atonement, 431 ; im-
policy of Swedenborg's attacks
upon, 434, 669.
Proud, Joseph, a Baptist turned Sweden-
borgian, ii, 605; temple built for him
in Birmingham, 606 ; goes to London
and draws great crowds ; 607 ; chapel
described by Southey, 625 ; has a
thousand hearers, 635; Sydney Smith
covets his pulpit, 608 ; popularity
declines, 609; his character, 609;
attacks Clowes, 609.
Providence, Divine, (De Divina Pro-
videntia), reviewed, ii, 237-299.
Providence, Divine, universal, general,
special, i, 275-278, 304 ; unless
particuhur could not be universal, ii,
264 ; talk about a general provideaoe
atheistic, 264.
Providence, Divine, has ibr its end
Man's happiness— a Heaven out of
the Human Race, ii, 41, 242 ; has
respect to what is infinite and eternal
in all operations, 244; equally with
wicked and good, 286 ; charges
neither with evil nor good, i, 807, ii,
289 ; pursues human salvation under
all circumstances, ii, 297 ; moved in
all things by pure mercy, 298.
Providence, Divine, secret laws of, now
to be revealed, ii, 242 ; Man should
act from liberty according to reason,
245; he should remove evils as sins
from his external, whilst the LonI
590
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUM^.
removes them from his intenud, 248;
he should not he outwardly foroed,
hat should inwardly force himself,
251 ; shoald be taaght hy the Word
as from himself, 257 ; shoald not feel
the Lord's hand, bat should know
and acknowledge it, 260 ; the Lord
always hides Himself, 261 ; a dirision
clearly made between Good or
Heaven and Evil or Hell, 266 ; Laws
of Permission, 269; Biblical diffi-
culties concerning, 270; worldly
difficulties, 271 ; Swedenborgian diffi-
culties, 283.
Prove, Peter, i, 230, ii, 330 », 576 »,
681 n, 582 n, 588 », 599.
Prudence, derived from Self-Love is
nothing, ii, 261 ; true Prudence is the
Divine Wisdom under the limits of
the Man's Understanding, 262 ; the
Evil cannot believe Prudence is from
€k)d, 263 ; they ascribe to Prudence
and Nature the rule of the Universe,
263 ; if they affect piety they say
Providence is only general, 264; the
Prudence of Self-Love appropriates
both Goodand Evil, 289.
Psychology revealed in Physiology, ii,
227, 230, 364, 467.
Pablius Syrus Mimus, i, 30.
Pnffendorf, i, 2.
Punishments never inflicted after death
for deeds done on Earth, i, 411.
Purgatory, or the World of Spirits, i,
414 ; no change possible after death
and why, 478.
QuAKSBS, as martyrs, 1, 301 ; their
mysteries and atrocities, 385-388 ;
notes upon, ii, 583, 592, 620, 621,
637 n, 664.
Rkadkbs, Swedenborg's cUuuufioation
of his, ii, 522.
Red oonreeponds to LoTe, 9, S29
RademptioD, how the Lord efiected, 2»
105; consummated, not oompriaed,
in crncifizioQ, 107, 540-543.
Reformation, follows Repeataaoe simI
precedes Regeneration, ii, 568 ;
eflfected by truths, 559.
Regeneration, quality of the Ume-
generate, ii, 569 ; is the subversioii
of Self-Love to Love of the Lord
and the Ndghboor, ii, 35; efl!ected
by the manifestation of Evil and its
rejection as Sin, 146, 283; assumes
two forces, 147, 256 ; Evils must first
be cast out ere Good is done, 153 ;
how the fight goes on and Man
transformed from Devil to Angel,
147, 257 ; the process continued to
eternity, and differs in each indi-
vidual, 560 ; Man's share in it wholly
external, and without merit : acoom*
plished by the Lord, 149, 249, 539 {
impossible without Remains, 188-
190 ; cannot be enforced from with-
out, thus not by sickness, nor other
modes of constraint, 253-255; in-
stantaneous salvation impossible,
298 ; Regeneration described by an
Angel, i, 441 ; not difficult to qualify
for Heaven, 479, and as easy for the
Rich as the Poor, 482 ; better never
enter the regenerate life than turn
back, ii, 268.
Reid, i, 1 75.
Reid, W. H., attacks Swedenborgians,
ii, 626.
Religions, salvation possible under all,
ii, 276 ; use of divers, 277.
Remains, the germs of Groodness
whereby Regeneration is effected, ii,
186-190.
Repentance, the confession and hatred
of sin, ii, 34 ; he who lives in charity
repents daily, 84 ; the beginning of
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
591
the Choreh in Man, 654 ; effsoted
by Belf-ezamination, which is pain-
fol, and difficult for Protestants, 554-
557; use of aaricnlar confession,
558.
Respiration, coincident with thought,
i, 124, 139; the Blood nourished
from efflavia inhaled, ii, 232 ; of the
Good and Eril difiers, 233.
Respiration, Swedenborg's peculiar, i,
139, 195, 263.
Respiration, Internal, of the Adamites,
i, 330, who were destroyed by its
derangement, 336 ; prevails in Mars,
511.
Resurrection, none of the flesh, i, 144,
407, ii, 38 ; the Sarionr's altogether
diverse from Man's, i, 371, ii, 110.
Rerelation, its office to correct the
illusions of sensation, ii, 237, 262,.
667; saves us from atheism, 258;
effected in the least oppressive forms,
259.
Rich, enter Hearen as easily as Poor,
i, 482 ; meaning of in Scriptures, 483.
Ritualism and J'etishism, ii, 652.
Robsahm, Director of the Bank of
Stockholm, i, 122a; on Sweden-
berg's mistress, 122 ; account of the
beginning of his risions, 243; an
execution, 403; a young man goes
to kill Swedenborg, ii, 496; their
last farewell, 501 ; sundry anecdotes,
etc, ii, 75, 76, 77, 78, 84, 88 », 331,
338, 342, 353.
Robinson, George, expelled from the
Easteheap Jerusalem, ii, 603.
Robinson, Thomss, his illnstrations of
Bwedenborgian character, ii, 640.
Rome, visited by Swedenborg, i, 119;
Babylon of Apocalypse, ii, 9.
Rotterdam fkir, i, 114.
Rosen, Dr., ii, 488, 493.
Roihery, Mrs. M. C. Hume, ii, 641.
Rousseau, i, 380, ii, 18.
Rules of Life, Swedenborg's, H, 80.
Ruling Love, determines character, i,
406, 478 ; its operation in the World
of ^irits, 408, 412.
Russia, Swedenborgians in, ii, 646.
Rusflians, Elisabeth presides over their
best society, ii, 89 ; their character,
91.
Ruysch, 1, 125.
SAnrrs, yenerated, not worshipped, i,
117 ; their sad case after death, 484-
485 ; their inyocation vain, H, 454 ;
Clement XII. found only two in
Heaven, 454.
Salem Chapel^ a good picturo of a
Swedenborgian cong^gation, ii, 638.
Salmon, J. W., ii, 593, 605.
Salt, derived from Water and the be-
ginning of the Mineral Kingdom,
i, 92; a cube of Salt the centre of
each red blood globule, 135; an
essay on Salt and its properties,
136-138.
Salvation, the subjection of Self-Love
to Brotherly Love, ii, 106; effected
by the Lord internally and by Man
externally, 149, 250 ; cannot be en-
forced, 253 ; accomplished in the
manifestation and remoTal of eyil,
283 ; constantly pursued by the Lord,
297 ; instantaneous impossible, 298.
Sameness exists nowhere in the Uni-
yerse, i, 277, 416.
Sandel, Samuel, authority for Sweden-
borg's Rules of Life, ii, 80 ; told by
Swedenborg that be wrote to dicta-
tion, 510 ; pronounces Swedenborg's
Euloginm in the Hall of Nobles, 689.
Sara Greta is shewn an Angel, ii, 665.
Satan , no single Spirit so called: Satans
lippear pale and livid like oorpsos, i,
497.
592
INDEX TO BOTH YOLUHES.
Satara described, i, 616.
Saze-Cobnrg-Saalfeldt, a Prinoe of,
missing, ii, 621.
Bazony, Elector of, ii, 488.
8chaddai,God,worahipped by Abnluuny
i, 349.
Sdheler, Dr. Augnstas, ii, 420.
Bcberer, ii, 74, 75«.
Scberingsson, i, 197.
fiobmidt, Sebastian, i, 6.
Bcbmidias, 8wedeDborg*8 band-book,
ii, 344.
Cksots, in Charity, Ii, 66; tbeir poor
' dirinity, 486.
Rcott, Samuel, on Hartley, ii, 692 n.
JSeripiure, Doetrins of (Ae Sacred
fDoetrina Nowb HteroHHiymm de
Ssripiura SaeraJ, reviewtd^ ii, 118-
148.
Sori|>tareti, the Sacred, witbont them
we sboold know nothing of tbe Lord
or Heaven and Hell, ii, 40, 186; all
treat of tbe Lord, 108-104; are a
map of God, 167 ; were dictated by
Jebovab and are preserved in im-
macnlate perfection, 118, 119, 12t,
644, 545 ; contain a Spiritual and
Celestial sense, i, 326, 363 ; existence
of these Senses hitberto unknown, ii,
123 ; a discrete degree between eacb
Sense, 212 ; compared to a garden,
130; to an abyss of wisdom, 546;
wbo alone can perceive tbe interior
Senses, 40, 129 ; books of the Bible
which contain Inner Senses, ii, 62,
and which do not, 53 ; reasonings of
the Natnral Man on the style of tbe
Scriptures, 121 ; the internal Sense
revealed for bis conversion, 122;
why Jewisb history was cbosen for
the Word, 139 ; must be interpreted
by Doctrine, 125.
Scriptures, Sacred, in Heaven, i, 463,
465 ; bow they diffsr fh)m the same
OB Earth, !l, 188 ; bow they eoBJdin
Angela sod Men with the Lord, 181,
S69.
Seriver's IhtatmefBr Sind$^ %%!%%,
Self-Ezambiatioa, i, 481 ; ii, 84| 486-
487,654.«&8.
Self-Love, indnees thick claikneM as t»
heavenly thingB, 1, 441 ; abeothent—
a kni-Joy, 452 ; ia Hall, 486.
Semen, mianse of the woid, ii, 86i.
Seneca, 1,80; Ii, 186,188.
Se^ff, i, 221.
Sensation, of independenoe an IDiifioD,
1, 169; ii, 588 ; repi^esentod by the
Serpent, i, 886; aa inversioB of
reality, H, 160, 289, 2W ; eoroiled by
oppodtaa, i, 486; ii, 66&
Seriea and Degreee pervade the Uai-
vene, i, 127; aiz eeriea in Creation,
128-129.
Servant^ Henzy, 11, 578, 600; ex-
pelled from the Eastobeap JenuMlera,
608; on Hlndmareh's indiflbrenoe^
61011.
Sex survives death, I, 486 ; ii, 357.
Sexual Love, originates in Woman,
ii, 374 ; dissipated by g^tification,
377 ; simulates Conjugal, 382.
Sexuality of Plants, denied by Sweden-
borg, ii, 351 ; bis misoonoeption of
the matter. 352.
Sbakspere, i, 182, 411 n, 460; ii, 141,*
662, 671.
ShapQ and Form, not to be confounded,
i, 421.
Sharp, William, ii, 599, 618.
Shearsmitb, Richard, ii, 574, 575, 576,
578, 579.
Shorn, signifies true internal worship,
i, 342.
Shoe, discussion whether a certain shoe
would fit a certain foot, i, 256.
Short, Dr., ii, 591 a.
Shyk)ck deified, fi, 432.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
593
fiiblj, Manoah, ii, 600; on Hind-
marsh's expulsion fVoni Eastoheap,
603 ; on the number of Sweden-
borgian Clergy, 622 n ; disapprovea
of public wrangling, 627 ; on Bweden-
borgianism in London in 1805, 635.
Siokness, no one reformed in, ii, 255.
Sigismund, King, ii, 82.
Sins, repressed hj Self- Love still re-
tained, ii, 145; shunning Evils as
Sins the very essence of the Christian
Beligion, 146 ; Sins can only be re-
sisted from Goodness, 147; until
east out no Good can be done, 153 ;
method of the conquest of Evil, 249-
350; Protestant notions about Sin,
554; Henry James on glib con-
fession, 555; a wholesale confession
in the Spiritual World, 555.
Sirens, infest Swedenborg, i, 304;
govern Popes, ii, 451.
Sixttts v., ii, 452.
Sloane, Sir Hans, i, 247 ; Swendenborg
converses with him on the co-
operation of Nature and Spirit, ii,
225.
Smith, Dr., i, 222, 223; Swedenborg
committed to his care, 224, 241 ; ii,
574 fi.
Smith, Samuel, U, 585, 593, 601, 602.
Smith, Southwood, ii, 234.
Smith, Sydney, on the equality of the
sexes, ii, 363; covets Prond*s Chapel,
608.
Smithson, J. H., if, 647 n.
Snuff, taken profusely by Swedenborg,
ii, 578.
Society for the Ph>pagation of the
Gospel, i, 317.
Societies of Heaven, innumerable, i,
414 ; similarity of character the law
of their association, 414 ; few Angels
venture beyond their Sodety, 415;
possess a common physiognomy, 416.
Societies of Hell, numerous as those
of Heaven, i, 486 ; each a Monster,
488.
Socinianism, repudiated by Sweden-
borg with horror, ii, 489, 542.
Solander, Dr., ii, 588.
Soldier, the, who acts firom Charity,
ii,160.
Solidarity of Humanity ,^ii, 4, 5, 130,
138, 220, 291.
Solifidianism, exposed and derided, ii,
321.
Sonstadt, Edward, ii, 641.
Sorbonne, a theological debate there,
i, 117.
Soul, derived from one*s finther, i, 1,
147, ii, 103, 353 ; Aristotle cited in
proof, 148 II ; its laws fixed and
orderly as those of mechanics, 86 ;
possesses no intuitive knowledge,
88 ; Meckaniitn oflnlereaurte between
Soul and Body reviewed, 105-109 ;
the Soul being finite is extended, 105 ;
is a constituent of the Body, 106»
108; dwells m the Brain, 106 ; is an
immortal machine, 123, 131 ; Sweden-
borg resolves to find it by dissection,
123, 129, 131, 149-150; treatise on
the Soul, 127 ; fancies he has fonnd
it in Animal Spirits, 132-133; con-
eludes Animal Spirits are its organ,
140; defines it as a fluid most
absolute, 141 ; it eludes him, but he
will not abandon the quest, 142, 149 ;
decides that it does not live of itself,
but by God*s presence, 148 ; See, ii,
118, 465; that it is not material, i,
151 ; two ways of approaching it —
the analytic and synthetic, 152; it
lives by God, but tlie manner of His
coqfunctioQ therewith unknowable,
146-147.
SovX, IfUereemree hehoem^ tmd Bodf^
reviewed, ii, 466-477.
594
INDEX TO BOTH V0LU1CE8.
Soatli, the, its oonrespondmioe, S, 308.
Soathej, his Uft of Wesley, i, 884 ;
TiBito Pioad'8 Chapel, ii, 625 ; on the
Grand Man, 626.
Space, in the Spiritoal Wozld, i, 260,
431.
Space and Time, confined to Natnie,
ii, 133; finite and began with Crea-
tion, 206, 532-533.
Spence, William, ii, 599.
JSjpedmeni of Ctouifry, by Swedsn-
borg, i, 64.
Bpinoaa, ii, 98, 99, 461.
BpinsterB, after death, ii, 860,
Spiral, motion an eYerlasting, i, 89;
the white Uood moyes Bpisallj, 140;
a spiral dance, 166.
efprnhud ChrUHamiy, by a A. Talk,
U, 617.
i^^iritual Diari/^ Swedenborg's, com-
menced, iy 289; edited and printed
by Tafel, 289 n\ described, with
extracts, 289-809.
Spiritoalism as related to Sweden-
borgianism, ii, 644.
Spiritual Kingdom of Heaven, i, 417.
Spiritual Sense of the Scriptures, i, 363 •
365, ii, 123 ; who alone can perceive
it, 129; why not revealed before, 139;
how realized, 639 ; the Mystical
Senses of Fathers and Schoolmen,
670.
Spiritual Stories, otherwise Memo-
rabilia, ii, 313, 523 ; printed by
command of the Lord, 571 —
A Sham and a True Chris-
tian ... ... ... ii, 184
A Prophecy fulfilled in Swe-
denborg 313
An Old Man in a Cave ... 315
A Couple of Solifidians 317
An Assembly of Wiseacres 319
Peter's Keys 321
A Wedding in Heaven ... 354
A Gonplo fimn Kdra .^ 404
A Diflonssion on Influx -• 467
Why Swedenborg tuned
Theologian 47S
Aboat Familiar Spirita ... 51S
A Cheat Sinner ... 666
Spiritoal World, intimately related to
the Natoral, i, 259, 368, 880; toonl-
ward view altogether similar %o
the Natural, ii, 217 ; its pbenomenft
reflect the minds of its inhabitants,
i, 261, 431, ii, 886; is the realm. of
niosions, i, 168, 197 a ; 532, ii, 668.
Spontaneoos Qenesation, ii, 224, 673;
Springer, Swedish Consol in London,
i, 233 ; reminiscences of Swedenbofg,
ii, 828-331 ; on his diet, 576 n.
Spnrgin, Dr., ii, 689>
Stahlhammer, ii, 64.
Stanislans, Khdg, ii, 424, 519.
Stanley, Dean, on the Bible and Konn,
ii, 120.
Stars, caose of dimness and dieappear-
anoe, i, 159 a.
Stenches, Devils enjoy, i, 413« ii, 233,
299.
Stilling, Jung, ii, 87, 91, 93 n.
Stockholm, fire seen at from Gk>ttenburg,
ii, 61 ; beauty of its site, 336.
Strutt, C. £., translator of Swedenborg,
i, 177.
Strutt, Mrs. £., ii, 641.
Substance and Form — Love the first
and Truth the second, ii, 197 ; God
is essential Subetance and Form, 198,
215, 238, 527, 531.
Sun, the, speculations of Swedenborg
about, i, 62 ; consists of Points of
Force, 92, 128; how £arth8 were
bom from him, 92, 158-161 ; creates
the Vegetable Kingdom, 162 ; in-
feriority to the Spiritual Sun, 262 ;
is pure fire, i, 520, ii, 218; consists
of created substances whose activity
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
595
produces fire, il, 218 »; how he oo-
operates with the Spiritoal Son, 220,
221.
Son, the Spiritiial, first Indicated, i,
147 ; aocnnttely described, 162 ; cre-
ates Animals from Plants, 163 ; Uni-
Terse depends on it, 261 -262 ; appears
to each Angel according to his re-
ception of the Lord, 426, ii, 208; the
centre of gravity iu Heaven, i, 427 ;
Its heat and light perverted In Hell,
494-495 ; shines on the intenials of
good Men, ii, 23, 208 ; is the origin
of vital heat, 228 ; is seen by Sweden-
borg, 207 ; it is firom God, but is not
God, 209, 216 ; by it He produced and
sustains the Spiritual World, and all
Suns and Planets, 216, 219, 534 ; by
it He is omnipresent, 538.
Supper, the Holy, its conrespoodence
and uses, ii, 37, 563.
Svcdberg, Albrecht, eldest brother of
Swedenborg, bom, i, 6; dies, 17.
Svedberg, Eliezer, brother of Sweden-
borg, bom 1689, dies 1711, i, 74;
appears in vision ti» Swedenborg,
216.
Svedberg Family, enumerated, i, 43,
47, 74; ennobled and the name
changed to Swedenborg, 58.
Svedberg, Jesper, father of Sweden-
borg, bom 1653, i, 1; character of
his parents, 1 ; escapes from drown-
ing, is destined for the pulpit, and
■ent to Upeala and Lund, 2 ; has a
vision, hears celestial music, and is
directed in his studies by aa Angel,
8; serves as tutor, prints a sermon,
and is appointed Chaplain to the
King^s Life Guards, 4 ; marries and
goes travelling, 5 ; returns and finds
a son, 6; pleases the King, 7 ; another
■OB bom, and named Emanuel, 9 ;
promoted by the King to varioos
offices, 11; revises Swedish Bible,
11 ; brings out a new Psalter, 12 ;
names of his children, 13 ; death of
his wife, and son Albrecht, 17;
denounced as a Papist on account of
their epitaph, 18; a short courtship
and a second marriage, 19 ; his house-
warming, 20 ; his bold conduct before
Charles XII., 20; his house burnt,
his cry for help, and is appointed
Bishop of Skara, 22.
Svedberg, Jesper, as Bishop: his seal,
i, 23; remonstrates with Charles
XII. on the taxation of the Clergy,
23 ; hoaxed by an Angel, 25 ; casts
out devils from his maid-servant,
and brings a female convict to re-
pentance, 25; works a miraculons
cure, 26; his theology, discipline
and patronage, 26 ; prints a Swedish
grammar, and prepares a dictionary,
28; house burnt down, and outcry
over disaster, 33 ; asks the King (or
places for his sons, 36; house rebuilt,
35; fiuicy about the origin of the fire,
86 ; asks the King again for a post
for Emanuel, 36 ; and again, 37 ; and
yet again, 42; also to ennoble his
sons and sons-in-law, 43 ; and again,
47 ; proposes to work a copper-mine,
53; Tisito Charles XII., 53; fisvours
absolute monarchy, 58; speech in
Diet, 59 ; rough treatment of royalty,
I 69; his third marriage, 60; de-
nounced in Diet for pietism, 72 ;
advice to a son returned from sea,
78, 485 ; his house again bumf, 76 ;
joy in his son Emanuel, 110 ; auto-
* biography, 110; death and ftmeral,
111 ; character, 112-113, 485 ; leaves
00— iderable property, 113; appears
to Emanuel after death, 205, 211,
284, 806, 402.
Swammerdam, ii, 862.
596
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
Sweden, Swedenborgiana rare in, il,
647.
Swedenborg, Emannel, his grand-
father Isaksson, i, 1 ; birth, and
why called Emannol, 9 ; Upsala, the
home of his boyhood, 13 ; yoathAil
meditations, 15 ; peculiar respiration,
17 ; death of his mother and brother,
17 ; first essays in authorship, 30 ;
goes travelling, and perils of the
voyage, 30 ; lives a year in England,
31 ; Holland, and a year in Paris,
33 ; settles at Griefsvalde, 33 ; his
father begs Charles XII. to find him
employment, 35 ; and again 86 ; and
yet ag^in, 37 ; details his doings to
BenzelioR, 37 ; list of his schemes,
38 ; another letter to Benselins, 40 ;
pnblishes Fables and Oration, 41 ;
returns to Sweden, and his father
again sues for employment, 42 ; and
again, 43 ; publishes Poems, 44 ; his
projects commercial and scientific,
46; starts Dcedalua Hyperboreus^
47 ; introduced to Charles XII. and
appointed Assessor of Mines, 46 ;
their conversations, 49; employed
by Charles in engineering, who
suggests his marriage to Polhem*s
daughter, 52 ; writes on Tin-Plate
and proposes to work a copper mine,
53 ; letter to Benzelius on his Father
and the King, 54; the siege of
Frederickshall, 55; letter to Ben-
zelius on his relation to Charles, 55 ;
ennobled and name changed, 58;
scientific pamphleteering, 60 ; advo-
cacy of novelties, and speculations
about the Sun, 61 ; griefs and
melancholy, 62 ; goes travelling
with Dr. Hessel, 63; geol<^cal
speculations, 63 ; publishes five
books at Amsterdam, 64 ; his che-
mistry, 64 ; visits mines and smelt-
ing works, 67; pnhlisbes MiactOth'
neou§0h$ervati<m$,S7 ; returns bome,
69 ; writes on the Swedish Coneiiey,
70 ; declinss professorship of matlie-
matics, 7 1 ; Unge urges him to many,
74; keeps a mistress instead, 75;
goes abroad, visits Beriin and ]>res-
den, 76 ; meets with WolTs writiBgs
and Wolf, 78, 79, 81 ; publiflh HOo-
iophieaH and Mineral Workt and
InfimU^ 79 ; returns to Sweden, 82 ;
resolves to discover the Soul, 109;
his father's death, 110 ; goes abroad
to study Anatomy, 113; refleotions
on the Dutch, 115; occupations in
Paris, 116-118; goes to Italy, 118;
visits Rome, 119; trace lost of his
goings, 120; probable ooonpation
between 1736 and 1743, 121, 124;
publication of Eoomomy of Animid
Kingdom^ Animal Kingdom^ and
Wortlup and Love of Ood, 120, 243.
In his Character a$ J^riiuaUst.
Premonitions of a new state, i, 195;
discovery of his Diary by Klemming,
196 ; leaves Stockholm for Amster-
dam, 199; visions, anguish, and
bliss, 200-216; leaves Holland for
London, 217 ; lodges in Fetter Lane,
and gets among the Moravians, 219;
Brockmer's aooonnt of his mental
derangement, 220-225 ; Jews stnl
his watch, 233; his shuddering fits
and other affections, 234-241 ; various
accounts of the opening of his
spiritual sight, 244; returns to
Stockholm, 248 ; learns Hebrew and
writes Advereariaf 249 ; retires fhnn
Assessorship on full pay, 249 ; sails
for London, and commences JSjnrihuU
Diary, 289; Areana Cadseiia pub-
lished, 310 ; Lewis's advertisemeot,
814; its small sale, 811, 818; lifb
INDEX TO BOTH TOLnifES.
597
^Tided between London and Stock-
holm, 382; pnblisbes five books in
London, 1758, 404 ; diaoerns a fire
at Stockholm from Gottenbnrg, ii,
61 ; helps Madame llarteTille to find
a lost receipt, 63; deliTcra to the
Qneen of Sweden a meesage ficom
her deceased brother, 65 ; defines to
her the limit of his spiritnal ac-
qnaiatance, 67 ; Kant's jealoosj of
Swedenborg, and certification of his
cLoirrojance, 68 ; foretells a man's
death on the morrow, 75 ; neglects
chnrch going, 76 ; roticenoe on
spiritnal matters, 77; a floweiy
preacher, 78; plain dealing with
Bishop Hallenins, 78 ; conduct in
the Swedish Diet, 79 ; Rules of Life,
80 ; supports H5pken, and glorifies
Sweden, 80 ; denounces Popery and
despotism, 81 ; advocates alliance
with France in preference to Eng-
land, 83 ; opinions on the Currency,
83; Hopken's estimate of his sup-
porter, 84 ; contributes a paper on
Inlaying to the Academy of Sciences,
86; announces in Amsterdam the
murder of Peter III., 87 ; yisited by
a Merehant of EUberfield, 91 ; a large
literary scheme ' by command of the
Lofd,' 100; which he modifies, 101 ;
meets and converts Dr. Beyer, 300 ;
iaterview with his London book-
seller, 301 ; publication of Apooalypte
Bmtaied, 308; advises Beyer to read
his Spiritual Stories, and expects
they will cause a convulsion among
the English Bishops, 324 ; competes
for the English reward for finding
longitude at sea, 327 ; reminiscences
by Springer and Bergstrom, 329 ;
his voyages, 330; advises Beyer to
caution in the publication of the
new Tiews, 831 ; correspondence with
Oettnger, 8S3 ; his house and gaiden
at Stockholm, 336 ; habits at home,
338-343; his Bibles, 343 ; Tisit and
leminiscences of GoUin, 344; a
stndent's risit and story, 346 ; rela-
tion to liinnana, 351 ; publishes
Comjmgitd Lont^ and puts his name
on the titlo-page, 353; Cuno, an
Amsterdam gossip, records many de-
tails concerning him, 420-426, 444,
446, 510; pubUshes ^ric^i^zpoftUaa,
426, and circulates it widely, 443 ; a
mysterious trip to Paris, 446, 447,
459 ; Lavater writes to him, 455 ;
publishes /nleroowrse beheee» SotU
and Bodjf, 459; Cookworthy cm-
Terted, publishes Dodrime cf Lift in
English, 479; Dr. Messitcr's servke,
479; Ber. Thomas Hartley, convert
and translator, 480; Hartley receives
a bit of autobiography,, 481 ; Com-
jvgial Love arrested in Sweden, 487,
495 ; treachery of Bishop Filenius,
487 ; is attacked in Gottenbnrg
Consistory, 444, 488 ; complained of
in the Diet, 489; appeals to the
King, 491 ; plot to confine him as a
lunatic, 495 ; sends the Academy of
Scimoes a paper on the symbolism
of the Horse and offers to interpret
Egyptian hieroglyphics, 497 ; write!
to Beyer about a boy who has
visions and prewrribes remedies,
498; and about his wife's death,
499; bids Robsahm farewell, 501 ;
visits General Tnxen, 503 ; a curious
conceit about the year of his birth,
504 ; interview with Klopstock,
508 ; a fiery leaf against Emesti,
516, and Ekebom, 517; corresponds
with Landgrave of Hesse Darm-
stadt, 518 ; a lost German Prince,
521 ; classification of his readers,
522; summary of his revelation.
598
INDEX TO BOTH TOLUMES.
680 ; oommenoes book! nerer to be
finished, 671 ; a mysterioos in-
Tentoiy, 673; bit serend London
lodgings, 674; Shearsmith's hoase
and habits there, 674-678 ; visited
by Ferelias, 679, by Okely, 682, by
Hartley and Cookworthy, 683, by
Hartley and Messiter, 684 ; stricken
with apoplexy, 683; asserts his
yeracity, 684 ; wishes to see Wesley,
684, foretells the day of his own
death, 686; visited by Springer, 666;
loses his spiritual sight for a time,
686; wishes to see Hartley, 686;
Bergstrom's visit, 687 ; receives the
Holy Bapper from Ferelius, 687 ;
happy death, 688; ftmeral, 688;
Sandel's £alogiam, 689; violation
of his tomb, 689; epitaph, 690;
visitors to his lodging, 691 ; slightly
esteemed in Sweden, 647; medal
struck in his honour by the Royal
Academy of Sciences, Stockholm,
648.
Health.— A strong constitution, ii,
338 ; activity in old age, 423 ; troubled
with stone, ii, 76 ; disease threatens
his life, 313 ; pnins induced by Evil
Spirits, 338-339; stricken with
apoplexy, 683. His peculiar respira-
tion, i, 17, 263.
Food. — He eats too much, i, 216; his
first command from Heaven, * Eat
not so much,* 243, 244; ii, 677;
certain Angels pleased thathc should
take butter, and certain milk, i, 296;
Sirens try to appropriate his delight
in almond cakoH, pears, and pigeons,
804; food riphtly used in Jupiter,
613 ; at home, his dinner bread and
milk ; drank sweet coffee day and
nipht, ii, 338; in Amsterdam, choc-
olate and biscuit his usual dinner,
426 ; in London, dined on bread and
■iflk, 688 ; Hie <fldLe0 with rery sw«ei
tea or coffee, 676 ; drank wine only
when in company, 880, 888, 4t6,
676; practically a Tegetarian, 576 a;
ids opinion of tile inflae9oe of food
on the mind, 677, winch compare
with that on respintion, ii, 222;
fook ssoff pioAmely, 578.
I>rt99.^At home, ii, 343 ; in AmsCer-
dam, 422; in London, 880, 578;
sword and canes, 678.
Conver»aUon. — Talked slowly and im-
pressively, ii, 343 ; stuttered, i, 226,
ii, 421 ; spoke French and Gorman,
but neither readily, 421 ; eonld not
speak Dutch, 424; spoke Englbh
badly, 301, 676, 683; conversed with
Okely in German, 683.
Delighi in ChUdren.—Boy% fighting
excite his own pugnacity, i, 303;
lets Angels witness a fight through
his eyes, 396 ; studies boys and girls
at pUy, ii, 366; kindness to little
folks in Amsterdam, 422, and in
London, 675 ; Hart's girl, 581 ;
shews Sara Greta an Angel, 665.
BelaHons with Women. — Charles XII.
suggests that he marry Emerentia
Polhem, who declines, i, 62 ; nrged
to marry by Jonas Unge, 74 ; keeps
a Mistress instead 76, 122; has a
Mistress in Italy, 121 ; ii, 506 ;
Women his strongest passion, 200 ;
illustrations thereof, 211, 216, 219,
235, 238 ; Sara Hesselia incites him
to suicide, 309; refuses to sec
Women alone, ii, 75, 500 ; sanctions
Fornication and Concubinage, 412-
419 ; a bride, the Countess Gyllen-
borg, awaits him in the Spiritual
World, 600.
Money Matters, — Inherits a com-
petency, i, 113, 207 ; his salary as
Assessor, note iu, app. ; pnident
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
599
habitaally, 182; retiret from oflSce
on full pay, 249 ; finds worldly cares
shut Heaven, 291 ; dedicates pro-
ceeds from Arcana C^destia to Pro-
pagation of GKMpel, 316; his opinion
aboat Rich and Poor, 482-485; at
once liberal and fmgal, ii, 344;
gives nothing to Beggars, and why,
i, 292; ii, 344; his credit in Am-
sterdam, ii, 422 ; lets Shearsmith pay
himself, 575; a bill for £400 in bis
pocket-book at death, 588.
Ojtening of Spiritual Intero(mr$e. —
Dawn of Heavenly Light, i, 186;
Dreams, Flames, Voices, Touches,
195 ; commanded to write, and sees
a Golden Key, 196; his Book of
Dreams, 196-219, 233-242; Brock-
mer*8 Narrative, 220-225 ; a change
certainly came over him about 1745,
ii, 662 ; he could not have invented
the Spiritual World, 663.
ImUrcour84 with Spiriti. — He is directed
by an Angel whilst writing, i, 292 ;
Spirits often g^ide his hand, 293;
and one claims his work, 300; in-
cited by Spirits to steal from shops,
293; others affect his palate, 296;
others set him longing for white
raiment, 298 ; he discovers their
association with places, garments,
and furniture, 301 ; Evil Spirits try
to throw him under carriage wheels,
303 ; Sirens seek to enjoy his food,
304; Spirits possess him ntteily,
804 ; Angels move him at pleasure,
ii, 293 ; he learns to refer his good-
ness to God and his evil to Hell, i,
307, ii, 290, 292 ; Paul excites in him
adulterous thoughts, i, 392 ; Spirits
about him contradict the preacher
when in church, ii, 581.
Lets Polhcm witness his own funeral
through his eyes, i, 393; allows
Angela to see the world in the Mme
way, 395, 3%; also Spirits of Jupiter,
513; in torn he sees Planets and
tkeir inhabiUnts, 506, 531 ; lets the
Danish Royal Family enjoy a party
at General Tnxen's through his eyea,
ii,506.
His terrible and indescribable tempta-
tions, i, 288, ii, 579; appearance
when under temptation, ii, 341-42,
678.
Suffers physically from Spirits, i, 290 ;
hoeU try to suffocate him, 293 ; Panl
and Hypocrites induce toothache for
several days, 393, ii, 338 ; aspect of
Hypocrites, i, 808 ; other sufferings^
ii, 339.
Asserts that no Angel or Spirit dare
instruct him concerning the Word
or the Doctrine of the New Church :
he receives all from the Lord alone,
ii, 255, 566 ; commanded by a voice
from Heaven to write an exposition
of Apocalypee, 15, 309 ; professed to
write to dictation, 510.
Has the clearest perception for many
years, that he neither wills nor thinks
anything from himself, ii, 239-240.
In what way he saw Angels, Spirits,
and Devils, i, 257-268 ; how he ap-
peared and disappeared in the Spi-
ritual World, 460 ; his acquaintance
with Familiar Spirits, ii, 512-513;
often conversed for days with the
Spirits of Men in the Body, 526.
Divine AppearanctM, — The Lord ap-
pears to him at Delft, i, 204; He
again appears, 2 10 ; other accounts
of His first appearance, 243; Sweden-
borg's own statements, 250-254;
how the Lord was seen by him, 281 ;
he sees Him as the Sun, and out of
the Sun, i, 42 >, ii, 207, 208 ; sees
Him as Light, i, 428; has much
600
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
. talk witH Angels about the Spiritual
Sun, ii, 216.
The Lord'9 Second Advent. — How
effscted by Swedenborg, i, 285, ii, 20,
128, 566, 674; announces the passage
of the Last Judgement, if, 2 ; saw it
executed when wide awake, 565;
- Rome judged, ii, 13 ; Protestantism
judged, 191 ; deliyers the ood& of
doctrine for the New Churob, ii, 20 ;
the tweWe Apostles sent to preach it
in the Spiritual World, 568.
Characten aeen in the Spiritual World.
— Spiritual information bounded by
earthly experience, i, 458-459, 519 ;
he knows nothing of Uranus or
Neptune, 518 ; states his case to the
Queen of Sweden, fl, 67 ; hb por-
traits reflect his prejudices, 664 ; the
Spiritual World the realm of iUusions,
i, 168, 197, 532 ; ii, 663.
Adolphus Frederick
... ii, 511
Ag^es, St. .••
• ••
455
Apostles, the twelve
547,568
Aristotle
• ••
475
Athanasius, St.
... 115
Augustine, St. ..
• ••
484
Augustus
... 849
Brahe, Count ...
• • «
i, 403
Benedict XIV. ...
... ii, 450
Calvin ... ...
• ••
440
Charles XI.
... 1,399
Charles XII. ...
• ••
397
Christian VI.
... 289
Christina
• ••
402
CScero
... ii, 350
Clement XII. ...
• ••
450,454
David
... i,389
De la Oardie ...
• ••
U, 89
Elector of Saxony...
... 438
Elizabeth of Russia
• ••
88
Frederick V.
... 507
Folkes, Martin
• ••
225
Fox, George
... i, 388
GeneTidve, St.*.. ... ii, 455
Qeorge II. ... ••• ..• #01
Gustavus Adolphus ... i, 401
Ghistavus Vaaa 401
Oyllenborg, Oounteaa ... ii, 500
John^^t. ... ... ..• 834
Leeuwenhoek 96
Leibnits ... 475
Louis XIV 449
Loyola 453
Luther •.. 437
Mahomet ... ... .•• 486
Mary ... ... ... 110
Melanothon 438
Moses i, 388, ii, 334
Newton; Sir Isaac ii, 58
Paul, St i,391
Penn, William 388
Peter, St. ... ... ii, 579
jreter x. •«• ... ... vi
Peter III 87
Polhem i, 393
Polhem, Emerentia ... ii, 500
Sixtus V 452
Sloane, Sir Hans ... 225
Stanislaus 424, 519
Svedberg. Eliexer ... i, 216
Svedberg, Jesper 205, 211, 402
Ulrika Eleonora ... 400
Virgil ii, 346
Wolf 475
Xavier 453
Zinzendorf i, 334
Swedenborg, Jesper (youngest brother
of Emanuel), returns from sea, and
receives a letter of advice from his
father, i, 73 ; marries and perpetu-
ates the family, 74.
Swedenborg Association, its formation
and failure, i, 176177.
Swedenborg'e Dreamt {Swedenborg'e
Drdmrnar^ 1744) discovered aud
edited by Kienmiing, i, 197; cita-
ti<msfrom, 198-219, 233-241.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
601
Swedenborg Society, ii, 633-634.
Swcdenborgians, English, Lacking^n
on, ii, 625; attacked by Reid, 626;
history of their Conferences, 627 ;
their statistics, 628 ; their hierarchy,
630; their periodicals, 631 ; attitade
towards Established Church, 631 ;
tracts, 633 ; Swedenborg^s works, 633 ;
edncational schemes, 634; rise of
the body, 635 ; increase ceased, 636 ;
character of the arerage Sweden-
borgian, 637, and of their Societies,
638 ; their preachers, 639 ; divisions
and controversies, 639, 642 ; Oissold's
delusive invitation, 643 ; their treat-
ment of Spiritualism, 644-646;
neither philosophers nor saints, 657 ;
attribate infallibility to Swedenborg,
657 ; their esoteric and exoteric doc-
trine, 658; Swedenborg not to be
saddled with Htndmarsh, 660 ; Clowes
versut Uindmarsh, 661.
Swedenborgians, in France, ii, 646 ; in
Germany and Sweden, 647; in the
United States, 648; characteristics
of American Swedenborgianism,
649-656.
Swedes, Swedenborg's opinion of, ii,
496.
Swedish Bible, revision of, i, 11, 54.
Swedish Church, its deadness, i, 71,
73, 188.
Swedish Dictionary, prepared by
Bishop Svedberg, i, 28.
Swedish Qrammar, i, 5 ; Bishop Sved-
berg prepares the first, i, 28.
Swedish Psalter, revised by Bishop
Svedberg, and suppressed, i, 12.
Swift, his loneliness, ii, 671.
Synthesis or Deduction pleasant and
easy, but the source of every error,
i, 152-153.
Tafel, Dr., editor of Swedenborg's
Advenaria, i, 249, and SjpirUMal
Diary ^ 289; his supplement to lAftcf
KatUf ii, 73, 75 ft. ; on Swendenborg's
Rules of Life, 80ii. ; his services
and character, 647.
Tartars, the Ancient Word preserved
among the, i, 340, ii, 53, 138.
Temple, Dr., on patriotism, ii, 158 n.
Temptation, described, ii, 35 ; unknown
at this day, 559.
Tennyson, trust in the victory of
Divine Love, ii, 296; marriage in
Heaven, 359; relation of Man and
Woman, 863; his enamelled Muse,
655.
Thackeray, i, 468; on George IL, ii,
307 ; on rival oyster shops, 645 ; on
the solitude of genius, 671.
Theft, spiritually, is the claim of
merit, i, 425.
Theology, may be learnt as any other
science, ii, 175.
Theosophical Society, ii, 599, 600.
Thiebault, ii, 65.
Thomas. St., quality of his faith, ii,
182.
Time, in Heaven, i, 429 ; to God the
Future is present, and the Present
eternal, ii, 297.
Time and Space, finite — began with
Creation and excluded from God, ii,
206, 532-533.
Times, The, ii, 55.
Tin Plate, pamphlet on, by Sweden-
borg, i, 53.
Tooth-ache, induced by hypocrites, i,
393, ii, 338.
Touch, the sense peculiar to Conjugal
Love, ii, 379.
Tradesman, the, whoacts from Charity,
ii, 161.
Trent, Council of, ii, 427, 429.
Trinity, Doctrine of, its value and
meaning, u, 42, 114, 435, 545, 637 m.;
2 R
602
INDEX TO BOTU VOLUMES.
as held thronglioat ChrlBtendom U
tiie worship of three gods, 431;
three persons unknown in the
Apostolic Church, 644; the trinity
in God repeated in each item of
Creation, ii, 212, 215.
Trojan Horse, ii, 52.
Drue Christian Rdigvon {Vera Ckrie^
Hana Meligio), written, ii, 510, 521 ;
reviewed 523^73 ; its profuse
imagery, 569.
Tmth, its own evidence, i, 271 ; the
scarce of every Angel's strength,
439 ; its universal relations, ii, 22 ;
the suhstance of conscience, 31 ; its
advocacy from self-love, i, 445, ii,
29, 266, 564.
Tucker, Dr., translator of Swedenhorg,
ii, 202, 597.
Tulk, CSiarles Augustus, ii, 500 n. ;
attempts to systematize Swedenhorg,
616; condemned by Noble, 642 ; his
Life by Miss M. C. Hume, 617.
Tulk, John Augustus, ii, 599, 616.
Tuxen, General, i, 121, 289 n. ; ii, 88;
Swedenhorg visits him at Elsinore,
and confesses concerning the year of
his birth and his love affairs, ii, 503-
506 ; Tuxen's conversion, 508.
Ugliness of Devils, i, 488 ; not ugly to
each other, 492 ; difference between
Satans and Devils, 497.
Ulrika, Eleonora, i, 22; promotes
Jonas Unge, 27 ; succeeds to the
Swedish crown and ennobles the
Svedberg family, 58 ; Bishop Sved-
berg thinks her a great hypocrite,
59; her state and marriage after
death, 400; visits Elizabeth of
Russia, ii, 90.
Underbill, Dr., ii, 73 ».
Understanding and Will, ii, 23, 231,
234; the Understanding the resi-
dence of Divine Wisdom, 226; an
organic form of the purest sab-
stances, 227; represented by the
Longs, 228; represented by the
Horse, ii, 50; controlled by the
AYiU, 178 ; Angels wiU not allow its
subjection to faith, 180.
Unge, Jonas, Swedenborg's brother-in-
law, i, 27; his malevolenoe, 62;
urges Swedenhorg to marry, 74.
Unitarians, worship the Creator alone,
ii, 637 n.; affinity between them
and Swedenborgians, 637.
United States, Swedenborgians in, ii,
648-649.
Universe is one: Heaven, Han, and
Hell knit together, i, 381, 459.
Unaer Voter or Voter Unser controversy,
i, 5.
Uranus, absurdly supposed to be known
to Swedenhorg, i, 160 n. ; 518.
Uses, the Lord's Kingdom consists of,
i, 472; He effects all by Angels,
474 ; Evil uses enumerated, ii, 222.
YAOuuif, Newton and Swedenhorg on,
ii, 58.
Vanity Fair, i, 468.
Yarignon, i, 33.
Vegetable Kingdom, created by the
Sun, i, 162; Animals bred from
Plants, 163.
Venator, corresponds with Swedenhorg,
ii, 518, 520.
Venus, described, i, 509.
Virgil, said to have visited Swedenhorg,
ii, 348.
Virginity, is to Angels as a cold wind,
ii, 361.
Visions, impotent for regeneration, ii,
254.
Voltaire, i, 33, 380, ii, 18, 426, 450,
508; on Wolf, i, 80.
Vortices, i, 97.
INDEX TO BOTH VOLUMES.
603
WADeriiOM, C. B., i, 231 ; expelled
from the Eastoheap. Jerasnlem, ii,
603.
Wahlin, Dr., ii, 689.
Wallerias, ii, 345.
Walton, Christopher, i, 321.
Wars of Jehovah, i, 339-340.
Water, derived from Air, i, 90, and
Earth from Water, 92.
Watts, Dr., i, 31, 247.
Wenngren, ii, 493.
Wesley, John, ii, 480, 682, 666, 669 ;
publishes Brockmer's account of
Swedenborg, i, 220 ; then invents a
tale of his own, 228 ; his credulity
and carelessness about truth, 229;
his fiction to be wholly divided from
Brockmer's facts, 229; Wesley on
Zinzendorf, 386 n.; Swedenborg in-
vites Wesley to Tisit him, ii, 684 ; he
defers the interview though warned
of his death, 686 ; sends him a copy
of True Christian BeUgion, 684 n.;
his enthusiasm in Swedenborg's
favour, and subsequent aversion, 693.
West, its correspondence, ii, 208.
White, corresponds to wisdom, ii, 229.
White Horse (2>« Equo AJbo, etc.),
reviewed, ii, 49-63.
White, J. Blanco, on monastic celibacy,
ii, 372.
Wilberforce, u, 430.
Wicked, can be useftil as the Good, yea
more useful, ii, 271, 276; how their
passions are turned to service, 272 ;
God equally with them and the Good :
He is- their life, yet not the cause of
their evil, 286.
Wilderspin, Alex., expelled from the
Eastcheap. Jerusalem, ii, G03.
Wilkinson, Dr. Garth, ii, 349 n. ; 609,
621 n., 641; translator of Sweden-
borg, i, 177; equalled by Emerson
to Bacon, 177.
Wilkinson, W. M., visits Swedenborg's
house, ii, 336.
Will, a holy, the perennial root of
Wisdom, i, 446 ; the Will governs the
Understanding, ii, 178; the residence
of the Divine Love, 226 ; an organic
form from the purest substances, 227;
represented by the Heart, 228 ;
divided into two regions — one for
Love of Self, the other for Love of
the Lord, 240, 286, 288; we have no
consciousness of its volitions until
manifested in thoughts and deeds,
284.
Will and Understanding, constitute the
Mind, ii, 23 ; their mutual relations,
231, 234 ; are organs of reception
like eyes and ears, 290; exist in
separation in Man, 470.
Wisdom, of the Angels, i, 440-445;
God is Wisdom itself, ii, 197 ; He is
Wisdom in Man, 209, 667.
Wolcott, ii, 692.
Wolf, Christian, i, 40, 48 n., 78; Swe-
denborg visits him, 79; persecuted
by the King and admired by the
Prince of Prussia, 80 ; Voltaire on
Wolf, 80 ; Swedenborg compares his
philosophy with Wolfs, 81 ; is be-
guiled by Wolf into materialism,
108; studies Wolf, 121 ; adheres to
him, 128; might have shared his
empire, 174 ; prompted by him, 184 ;
Wolf after death, ii, 476.
Woman, as her Body differs from Man's
so her Mind must, ii, 364 ; she is the
Love of his Understanding, 364, 374;
characteristics of her intolligenoe,
364; a ring of love found Man's
intellect, 366; derived from Man,
366, 368 ; she loves to be ruled by
Man, 366-367 ; she initiates nothing,
368 ; her perfect sympathy with and
dependence on Man, 369 ; love is
604
IHDEX TO BOTH V0UTME8.
iMpInt Into Man hf Imt, 874;
fionialaiid Oo^fugil Lore teg^ln
her— proved by ezpeiinMnt, S76;
aUK> Uip of Infiuita, 408.
Woodfofd, Bwedenbofgian boaidisg-
■olioolat,ii,6d4.
Woroeiter, Hioiiim, ii, 658II.
Word, tiie. In HeaTen, i, 468; fiiewodai'
nado oat of tezti, and Angda ifaine
when tiiqr rah themaelTeB with it,
464; how written in HeaTen, 465;
booka whioh oompoae the Word, ii,
88; ererfthfaig to the extent of iti
hehig a word of God, 189, 818. Ste
Baored SoripiorBa.
Word, the Anoient» ennmifieed hy
Ckdn and rednoed to doctrine hf
]iSnoeh,l,889; jawaorrad to tfda day
hi T^fftaiy , 840, ii, 58.
Word, Apoatdio, ii, 888 ; dlAniioe
' between it and the Word, 885.
World, the, wQl nerer end, ii, 4.
Worid of Spirita, betifeen HeaTon and
*HjiIl,i,405; oharaoter there rednoed
to ooniiatenoy, 406; a stomaoh
where the Good are abeortwd into
Hearen and tiie Eyil rejected to
Hell, 406, ii, 7; so like Earth that
those who Iiato passed through
death find it hard to heUere they
haye made any change, i, 407 ; ex-
perience of a noYitiate and a Jew,
407 ; sight-sedng, and dropping dis-
gaise8,408; mode of Judgement with
examples, 409-411; none pnnished
Ibr deeds done on earth, 411 ; is an
mdnlatimg TaDey between HeaTon
and HeU wftii gatea and wiya to
eaeh, 418, 419; how Spirits find
their eternal honie% 418; HeUa
ererywhere beneaA tiie Worid of
Bphtts^ 418; ia it not Fttrgatory 7
414; inatmotlon of GentOes Oere,
469; no one now lemaina In the
Worid of Spirita more than twenty
yaara, i, 405 «., ii, 7, 16.
Worahipt Is m^viavpenonal aflbetaon
towazda thaM^ i, 485, ii, 169;
mode of external worahip in Hearen
i, 446; tme Worship oonsiata in a
vaeftil life, 447, or in Lore to the
Melghbonr, U, 168; oonaiata pri-
marily in Gliarity and aeoondarUy
' fai Piety, H, 80; Ita external rigns,
168; the Lord lorea Wonhip for
Man's aake, 168^
WbrMp tmd Lom qf Qod fJM Omku
at Amot» 2M), annoonoed and wlien
written,!, 109; reriewed, 157-178;
mnotioed, 848; itsargomant aban-
doned, 887 ; ii, 816, 665.
Wretman, ii, 480. 484»
Wright, Thomas, ii, 600.
Wrightson, BoT., Henxy, ii, 501 n.
Xatixb, ii, 454.
"TouBLira,''ii,591]».
ZmasBoar, opinions and conduct after
death, 1,384.
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